By ArtsFuse on Jul 8, 2008 in Literature, Visual Arts, Featured, Short Fuse | 0 Comments
By Harvey Blume
Though it does not originate in the Kuiper Belt, the Beijing summer Olympics (8/8/08-8/24/08) is bearing down upon us like an outsized asteroid, bringing China out of feudal/communist distance into full twenty-first century relief. Sports, at this point, remain secondary:before we get to ping-pong, swimming, the shot-put and gymnastics, Americans have unprecedented […]
By ArtsFuse on Jun 25, 2008 in Literature, Featured, World Books | 0 Comments
By Bill Marx
Hu Jia, a freelance writer, civil rights, environmental and AIDS activist, was arrested in 2007 on suspicion of “inciting subversion of state power.”
Last week the PEN American Center announced it was sending out letters to the Bush Administration and Congressional leaders protesting, fifty days before the start of the Olympics, the curtailment of […]
By ArtsFuse on May 16, 2008 in Literature, Featured, World Books | 0 Comments
By Bill Marx and Wen Huang
Dissident Chinese writer Liao Yiwu lives near the epicenter of the earthquake in Sichuan province. His home is about 17 miles from the school where hundreds of students were trapped. Miraculously, his building survived, though there are several giant cracks in the concrete stairway. In his immediate area more than […]
By ArtsFuse on Apr 13, 2008 in Uncategorized, Literature, Visual Arts, Film, Theater, Galleries, Featured, Fuse Flash, Jazz | 0 Comments
By Bill Marx
“Boston is adrift in the brave new competition among big American cities vying for tourist dollars.” Maureen Dezell, WBUR
Maureen made that charge back in July 2006 in an article that turned out to be one of the last posts on the late WBUR Arts Online. Now that the quote, along with a link […]
By ArtsFuse on Mar 13, 2008 in Literature, Visual Arts, Music, Film, Theater, Persona Non Grata, Featured, Jazz | 0 Comments
by Bill Marx
A recent study in Editor & Publisher delivers the lowdown; with its circulation down about 20% in four years, The Boston Globe is in free fall. Two major investors in The New York Times, which owns the Globe, are “challenging the company’s investment decisions, including its commitment to the struggling newspaper industry beyond […]
By ArtsFuse on Jan 13, 2008 in Literature, Featured, The Collective Stupidity | 1 Comment
by Peter Walsh
“Collective intelligence has no relationship to the stupidity of crowd behavior.” — Pierre Lévy, The Collective Intelligence
The day before the New Hampshire primary, I went with a friend to hear George Packer, author of The Assassin’s Gate: America in Iraq, speak at Dartmouth College.
I knew George twenty years ago, when we both […]
By ArtsFuse on Jan 10, 2008 in Literature, Podcast | 0 Comments
ArtsFuse editor Bill Marx speaks with Gail Pool, the author of Faint Praise: The Plight of Book Reviewing in America, about the slow decline of literary criticism in the United States.
book reviewing, book reviews, Books, faint praise: the plight of book reviewing in America, fiction, Gail Pool, literature, non fiction, podcast
By ArtsFuse on Dec 30, 2007 in Literature, Featured, Short Fuse | 0 Comments
By Harvey Blume
Zugzwang,by Ronan Bennett
(Bloomsbury USA, 288 pages)
It’s an understatement to say chess has been good for literature; the game has even inspired people not known for the written word to produce memorable prose. Consider the following, for […]
By ArtsFuse on Nov 11, 2007 in Literature, Featured | 0 Comments
By Bill Marx and Harvey Blume
I was asked by National Public Radio’s Morning Edition to write an appreciation of the late Norman Mailer. I have posted an unabridged version of this necessarily short piece. After that, I have placed an interview Harvey Blume had with Mailer after the publication of his 1995 book Oswald’s Tale: […]
By ArtsFuse on Oct 27, 2007 in Literature, Persona Non Grata | 1 Comment
By Bill Marx
Part 1 here
Edmund Wilson’s Marxism, though leavened with a saving skepticism, could also push his evaluation of literature into a blind lockstep. For him, Willa Cather’s novels of the ‘20s, such as The Professor’s House, were not sufficiently aware of the effects of adverse social conditions to be of merit. “Yet in criticism,” […]