Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 9, 2004)
Winter Reading 2004-2005 accounts of Indian classical dance, Japanese butoh and other indigenous forms. The book’s few weaknesses are dance in film and the history of musical theater. But basically the authors have synthesized a huge amount of material in a captivating, thought-provok- ing account of this ephemeral art. — Martha Ullman West years, with no guarantee of a job at the end.” Tell it, sister! — Josephine Bridges Anarchy in the Desert Place O Comma Passion T Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, nonfiction by Lynne Truss. Gotham Books, 2004. Hardcover, $17.50. exhaustive history of dance in the last century, is indeed such a book, It should be fascinating to anyone interested in cultural history in general and dance in particular, with deft, informed accounts of both. Both authors started their professional lives as dancers. Nancy Reynolds, director of research for the Balanchine Foundation, danced with New York City Ballet. She wrote Repertory in Review: 40 Years of New York City Ballet and was an editor of the International Encyclopedia of the Dance. Malcolm McCormick also contributed to the International Encyclopedia and was a contrib- utor to The Golden Age of Costume and Set Design for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. Both writers are skilled at making the reader see what they have seen, and each has an uncanny ability to select quotations from other eyewitnesses to performances, such as critics, historians and audience members, that do likewise. The 900-page tome includes footnotes, bibliography and index, all of which are equally invaluable to researchers or someone seeking a quick reference to a dancer, chore- ographer, composer, designer or specific work. Want to know about the Judson Church Movement? You’ll find references to the participants — Twyla Tharp, Trisha Brown and many others — as well as to its chroniclers, such as critic and historian Sally Banes. Look up The Rite of Spring and dis- cover there are many choreographic takes on the revolutionary work as well as different uses of Stravinsky’s score. Like good dic- tionaries or library stacks, one subject in the book leads to another in extremely logical ways. The principal focus is on European and North American dance, but there are also I n his foreword to Eats, Shoots & Leaves, Franck McCourt writes, “Parents and chil- dren will gather by the fire many an evening to read passages on the history of the semi- colon and the terrible things being done to the apostrophe.” (The book’s title comes from a joke involving a panda, a weapon and a dramatic exit.) And author Lynne Truss writes, “If there is one lesson to be learned from this book, it is that there is never a dull moment in the world of punctuation.” Can commas and dashes real- ly thrill and inspire us? Can hyphens make us laugh out loud? In a word: Yes. A bestseller in Great Britain where it was originally published last year, the book is for “any true stickler,” Truss explains. She writes a concise job description for the apos- trophe, then treats readers to some aberrant uses of this most beleaguered of punctuation marks. “Member’s May Ball (but with whom will the member dance?),” “Please replace the trolley’s (replace the trolley’s what?),” and “Dicks in tray (try not to think about it).” As for the dash, people use it mainly because “they know you can’t use it wrongly” hey, I didn’t know that – “which, for a punctu- ation mark, is an uncommon virtue.” Here you’ll find the story of “Victor Hugo, who – when he wanted to know how Les Misérables was selling – reportedly telegraphed his pub- lisher with the simple inquiry ‘?’ and received the expressive reply ‘!’” And when the author “heard of someone studying the ellipsis (or three dots) for a PhD,” she wrote my favorite sentence among a lorry load of splendid contenders. “The ellipsis is the black hole of the punctuation universe, surely, into which no right-mined person would willingly be sucked, for three Foxfire 12, folklore edited by Kaye Carver Collins, Angie Cheek and former Foxfire stu- dents. Anchor Books, 2004. Paperback, $16.95. he Foxfire books have been loved and cherished by millions since the first vol- ume appeared in 1968. Eliot Wigginton, edi- tor of the first book, took a teaching job in Rabun Gap, Georgia, heart of rural Appalachia. Facing bitter, bored students, Wigginton suggested they throw away the textbooks and start a magazine. Students proposed topics that reflected the time and place in which they lived — interviewing their parents and grandparents to gain knowledge of mountain lore, faith healing, home remedies, log cabin building, planting by the signs of the zodiac, hunting and dressing game and “other affairs of plain living.” With the intention of involving the entire class in the process, Wigginton hoped that even one issue would rejuvenate his tired pupils and reawaken their love of learning. That hope was repaid as the first issue of “The Foxfire Magazine” blossomed into a regularly published journal, with subscribers all over the world and a book series now in 12 volumes. Foxfire 12 shares topics such as the art of making beads from rose petals, the biogra- phy of a local potter, how to make a wooden coffin and the history and how-to of square dancing. “Personality Portraits” includes interviews with and biographies of commu- nity elders, such as Fred Huff, a teacher and country music buff, and “the Goat Man,” a wanderer known for his deep connection with barn-yard animals. There are interviews with veterans of World Wars I and II and sto- ries from Rabun Gap’s elder Cherokee resi- dents. With black and white photographs throughout, the Foxfire books provide satis- fying information about rural living and explain how people accomplished things before technology. Number 12 is a welcome addition to a folklorist’s bookshelf. — Vanessa Salvia This Is Burning Man, nonfiction by Brian Doherty. Little, Brown and Company, 2004. Hardcover, $24.95 ver-zealous recruitment can turn off the uninitiated. For people who have never been to the annual week-long party in the desert known as Burning Man, Brian Doherty’s new book may have that effect. Such readers may roll their eyes at sentences such as: “A flood of glorious superfluity washes over you, and each day and night seem an eternal reoccurrence of everything both wonderful and terrible about life in a human community.” But for die-hard Burners, Doherty’s work might do the event as much justice as a mere book can. From its first paragraph, Doherty adopts a wide-eyed, you-had-to-be-there tone, maybe because Burning Man is so hard to pin down. In some ways, the author does a good job of summing up the indescribable. He calls par- ticipants “a gang of ‘twixt-hippie-and-punk intellectuals and edge-seekers — not the cool kids but the weird ones.” And he paints a lively picture of Black Rock City as a place of “functional anarchy,” where living in the moment is the cardinal rule. In these aspects, Doherty hits a nebulous nail on the head. For dedicated Burners, the book provides context for an event they know and love as well as an insightful biography of founder Larry Harvey and the history that led to Burning Man’s conception. It details the excruciating nuts and bolts, which hold together an event that feels effortless. And its images illustrate the sheer weirdness of MODERN 207 East 5th Avenue Across from 5th Street Market 686-1935 DECEMBER 9, 2004 21