If by "Americana" we just mean whatever in our cultural experience is distinctive, memorable, and worth telling, here's one of its great ambassadors--and with a strong middle Tennessee connection too:
Supporting the study, critique, and appreciation of American philosophy and culture--"American Studies"-- in the tradition of William James, John Dewey, Charles Sanders Peirce, Emerson, Thoreau, et al... This site was constructed initially to support an Independent Readings course at Middle Tennessee State University in the Spring 2021 semester.
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Tom T.
Thursday, June 27, 2024
Hoosier-ana
Irving Leibowitz, "My Indiana," published in 1964
https://www.threads.net/@reboomer/post/C8rliPTO0hQ/?xmt=AQGzZcdoQ_JYwiY-jTFWmw8Qm3pvQeMaHxW7mzILbmR-dQ
Wednesday, June 26, 2024
Forrest Hall update
A bit of Americana we'd like to lose: Forrest Hall name-change denied…
Tuesday, June 18, 2024
Americana texts on reserve in library
This is regarding your Course Reserves request for MALA 6050. The books you requested are now available and can be checked out at the Circulation/Reserves Desks. Both books have new call numbers, listed below:
Carlin Romano, America the philosophical - B851 .R66 2012
John McDermott, Streams of experience : reflections on the history and philosophy of American culture - E169.1 .M4973 1986
John Kaag, American Bloods: The Untamed Dynasty That Shaped a Nation
Suzy Burkhardt
615-904-8544
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Stay tuned for info on the availability of print editions of Doug Anderson's Philosophy Americana. Our library has the etext version:
https://muse.jhu.edu/book/
https://muse.jhu.edu/book/
https://ezproxy.mtsu.edu/
https://www.degruyter.com/
https://www.jstor.org/stable/
A free kindle etext version was still available at amazon.com in May '24.
jpo
Americana on the radio
There's more to "Americana" than music... but that's a big part of it. And it's the format of MTSU's radio station WMOT. This is the sort of music they play...
1. Townes Van Zandt Pancho and Lefty
2. Soggy Bottom Boys Man of Constant Sorrow
3. Little Feat Willin’
4. Old Crow Medicine Show Wagon Wheel
5. Lucinda Williams Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
6. Robert Earl Keen The Road Goes on Forever
7. Rodney Crowell & Emmylou Harris Shelter from the Storm
8. Billy Joe Shaver Live Forever
9. Jason Isbell If We were Vampires
10. Lyle Lovett If I Had a Boat
11. Mary Gauthier Mercy Now
12. Guy Clark L A Freeway
13. Bonnie Raitt & John Prine Angel from Montgomery
14. Gram Parsons Hickory Wind
15. John Hiatt Perfectly Good Guitar
16. Patty Griffin One Big Love
17. Richard Thompson 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
18. The Band The Weight
19. Brandi Carlile The Joke
20. Delbert McClinton Rita
21. Gillian Welch Orphan Girl
22. Jason Isbell Alabama Pines
23. John Prine Lake Marie
24. Rodney Crowell Ain't Living Long Like This
25. k.d Lang Constant Craving
26. Grateful Dead Sugar Magnolia
27. Guy Clark Desperadoes Waiting for a Train
28. Lucinda Williams Passionate Kisses
29. Mavericks Dance the Night Away
30. Billy Joe Shaver Georgia On a Fast Train
31. Steve Earle Copperhead Road
32. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band & Friends Will the Circle be Unbroken ('89)
33. Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash Girl From the North Country
34. John Prine Illegal Smile
35. Mumford & Sons Little Lion Man
36. Paul Thorn Hammer & Nail
37. Neil Young Heart of Gold
38. Alison Krauss Down to the River to Pray
39. Bob Dylan Shelter from the Storm
40. The Band Chest Fever
41. Emmylou Harris Born to Run
42. Lyle Lovett She's No Lady
43. Neil Young Harvest Moon
44. Lyle Lovett L.A. County
45. Rolling Stones Dead Flowers
46. Chris Stapleton Midnight Train to Memphis
47. Byrds You Ain’t Going Nowhere
48. Avett Brothers I and Love and You
49. Bob Dylan Tangled up in Blue
50. Brandi Carlile The Story
51. Dwight Yoakam Guitars & Cadillacs
52. Arlo Guthrie City of New Orleans
53. John Prine In Spite of Ourselves
54. John Hiatt Memphis in the Meantime
55. John Prine Summer's End
56. Kacey Musgraves Follow Your Arrow
57. Uncle Tupelo Moon Shiner
58. Little Feat Dixie Chicken
59. Lucinda Williams Can't Let Go
60. The Band Long Black Veil
61. Nathaniel Ratliff I Need Never Get Old
62. Parker Millsap Truck Stop Gospel
63. Mavericks All You Ever Do is Bring Me Down
64. Sam Bush Same Ol' River
65. Buffy Sainte-Marie Universal Soldier
66. Kasey Chambers The Captain
67. Bob Dylan Positively 4th street
68. Emmylou Harris C'est la Vie
69. Jayhawks Waiting for the Sun
70. Johnny Cash Hurt
71. Kacey Musgraves Step Off
72. Loretta Lynn & Jack White Portland, Oregon
73. Townes Van Zandt White Freightliner Blues
74. Lucinda Williams Changed the Locks
75. Mary Gauthier I Drink
76. Alison Krauss Baby, Now That I've Found You
77. Chris Smither Leave the Light On
78. Delbert McClinton Old Weakness Coming on Strong
79. Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Mr Bojangles
80. Los Lobos Will the Wolf Survive
81. John Hiatt Thing Called Love
82. Dave Alvin Fourth Of July
83. Gillian Welch I Want to Sing that Rock and Roll
84. James McMurtry / Ray Wylie Hubbard Choctaw Bingo
85. Decemberists Down By The Water
86. Guy Clark Dublin Blues
87. Jason Isbell 24 Frames
88. John Hiatt Have a Little Faith in Me
89. Grateful Dead Ripple
90. Radney Foster Hammer & Nail
91. Rihannon Giddens Better Get It Right the First Time
92. Emmylou Harris Pancho & Lefty
93. Kacey Musgraves Merry Go Round Kacey Musgraves
94. Sturgill Simpson Brace for Impact
95. Bruce Springsteen Old Dan Tucker
96. Uncle Tupelo No Depression
97. Rosanne Cash Sea of Heartbreak
98. Bela Fleck & The Flecktones Sinister Minister
99. Rosanne Cash Runaway Train
100. Asleep at the Wheel Miles and Miles of Texas
Just write
"Just write, get better, keep writing, keep getting better. It's the only thing you can control."
Roger Ebert, born on this day in 1942
https://www.threads.net/@reboomer/post/C8WtpQ7udpi/?xmt=AQGzgil-iv9blp74Mjnu3ND3Fp0QBFoFgg7N4AkdaTq7SA
Monday, June 17, 2024
“a sense of the future… a direction”
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/14/science/space/edward-stone-physicist-dead.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
Saturday, June 15, 2024
John Kaag's A.I. experiment
Margaret Atwood and John Banville are among the authors who have sold their voices and commentary to an app that aims to bring canonical texts to life with the latest tech.
For the past year, two philosophy professors have been calling around to prominent authors and public intellectuals with an unusual, perhaps heretical, proposal. They have been asking these thinkers if, for a handsome fee, they wouldn't mind turning themselves into A.I. chatbots.
John Kaag, one of the academics, is a professor at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. He is known for writing books, such as "Hiking With Nietzsche" and "American Philosophy: A Love Story," that blend philosophy and memoir... (nyt, continues)
==
The backstory:
I Am Laura Kipnis-Bot, and I Will Make Reading Sexy and Tragic Again
Margaret Atwood, Marlon James, Lena Dunham, Roxane Gay: We’ve all agreed to be turned into AI reading companions by a mysterious company called Rebind. I report from the inside.
...He also suspected there were a lot of people who, like him, wanted to read hard books—maybe not Being and Time, but let’s say Moby-Dick. “You read the first 40 pages and you put it on the shelf, right?” By then he was reading William James’ The Varieties of Religious Experience and loving it, and thought: Who’s the William James guy? It turned out to be John Kaag, who’d written a book called Sick Souls, Healthy Minds: How William James Can Save Your Life, a mashup of memoir and philosophy. Which is exactly what Dubuque thinks people want: not scholasticism, but to know how to connect great books to our lives.
WHEN KAAG GOT an email from Dubuque, he almost didn’t answer, but they eventually talked on the phone and hit it off, as Kaag told me over Zoom: “He turned out to be one of the most curious, thoughtful people that I’ve ever encountered.” The two joined forces to develop Rebind. Kaag brought on his friend Clancy Martin. They have similar profiles: untraditional philosophy professors who’ve written eclectic books, including about their struggles with depression. (Clancy’s most recent book is titled How Not to Kill Yourself.)
Kaag’s mother, who raised him on her own, was a substitute English teacher. At age 12 he was a bad reader with a stutter; his mother would sit with him at the kitchen table and they’d read through his assignments together—essentially an Oxford-style tutorial. It’s what he tried to replicate with his own commentary for Rebind on Thoreau’s Walden: relating the book to his own experiences and difficulties, which include a heart attack at age 40 followed by bypass surgery. (Thoreau, who died of tuberculosis at age 44, wrote movingly about fearing that bad health had prevented him from leading a meaningful life.) If a reader journals about their own life difficulties in the chat, AI finds the places where Kaag shares something similar. Now the two are in conversation. Seeing that back-and-forth happen as they tested out the prototype, Kaag and Dubuque got really excited—they were creating, they thought, a new way to read...
WiredThe Rebind backstory: rich plumbing supply wholesaler from St. Louis (former High School classmate of OpenAI’s Sam Altman, btw) sells his company for big bucks, hires an Oxford prof to tutor him on Being and Time, then picks up VRE, discovers AI, and asks “Who’s the William James guy? It turned out to be John Kaag”...
Should we be more worried about the future of AI, or more intrigued and hopeful? Both, maybe? What would WJ say? I think he’d be clear that, at least so far, we have no reason to think there’s anything like a subjective self-aware consciousness lurking in the technology. As a pragmatist he’d be cautiously open to deploying this new tool, but also concerned to remind us (in Jaron Lanier’s phrase): “you are not a gadget.” And gadgets are not really intelligent. Not yet. But Ray Kurzweil says we’re still on track for the Singularity...
Tuesday, June 11, 2024
Cole Porter
Cole Porter, the composer and songwriter behind beloved Broadway standards like "You're the Top", "Let's Misbehave", and "Anything Goes", was born on June 9, 1891 in Peru, Indiana.
https://bit.ly/3w8ONB3
The end of our exploring
Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders, who captured the iconic "Earthrise" image during the first manned mission to orbit the moon, passed away this weekend at the age of 90.
https://www.threads.net/@americanexperiencepbs/post/C8CtjsLqXn6/?xmt=AQGzUdNYwUmqJQtDjqAE4kiCl4UId0A3Ec8B-bDuLdVS_w
Saturday, June 8, 2024
Friday, June 7, 2024
D-day
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
Zoot Suit Riots
Explore the complex racial tensions and the changing sociopolitical landscape that led up to the violence in ZOOT SUIT RIOTS, streaming now on YouTube and the @PBS app → https://bit.ly/3V6q7H6
Saturday, June 1, 2024
American Bloods
American Bloods is a long family saga that eventually gets to B.P. Blood. A reviewer* says:
At long last, the Blood family produced its own philosopher: Benjamin Blood. This Blood became a beacon of hope to none other than American pragmatist William James. “Not unfortunately, the universe is wild,” Blood wrote; “Nature is miracle all.” “Your thought is obscure — lightning flashes, darting gleams — but that is the way the truth is,” James responded. On his deathbed, James repaid the intellectual debt he owed Blood by recommending him as an “author of rare quality” and comparing him to Nietzsche.
From this motley crew of thieves, theorists, and seers, Kaag extracts a Blood family philosophy: “Ever not quite.” Whether they were stealing jewels, rejecting pieties, participating in John Brown’s unfinished project of racial reckoning, or helping America’s own philosophers learn how to be American, the Bloods were always, Kaag claims, guided by a “practical idealism — pluralistic, creative, dangerous.” It all makes a kind of wild, unruly sense. “Activity, heroism, and sheer willingness — bordering on madness,” Kaag writes, “is what all the Bloods, beginning with the jewel thief Thomas, were after.”
“Learn how to be American”... I’m still learning, I think. It’s a challenge these days, to embrace that identity. Isn't it?
==
AMERICAN BLOODS: The Untamed Dynasty that Shaped a NationBy John KaagFarrar, Straus & Giroux, 273 pp., $28
*Lydia Moland teaches philosophy at Colby College and is the author of Lydia Maria Child: A Radical American LifeBoston Globe
Tulsa massacre-American Experience
https://bit.ly/3oB0VMG
Scopes centenary
100 years ago today, Dayton, Tennessee high school teacher John Scopes was arrested for teaching evolution. It had gone exactly according...
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Dr. Phil Oliver -- phil.oliver@mtsu.edu James Union Building (JUB) 300 Our course explores American philosophy in the context of American cu...
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Jy 9 - Anderson, Introduction and ch1-2; McDermott, foreword/preface-ch1-3; Romano, Intro-Part 1. Here are some discussion prompts, you c...
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Oops! Forgot to give you the scorecard Tuesday night. Make a note to record your Jy 9 participation in the "2d inning"column next...