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Showing posts from January, 2019

Waiting out the polar vortex

Today is the midpoint of a three-day weather holiday for me. Karin had to go in to work (alas). Precious few clients have been passing through her credit union.

As I type this, the temperature is −18°F in my Zip Code area, with a windchill of −41°F. Or so it says on the Internet. It doesn’t look especially windy outside, but what do I know.

My plan for today is to post this blog entry, to dissertate, to read, and to watch one or two movies.

Others in my predicament might be interested in these classic movies that are due to expire from Netflix on February 1:

Children of Men (also expiring from Amazon Prime);

Close Encounters of the Third Kind; and

Touch of Evil.

Karin & I have begun watching Agatha Christie’s Ordeal by Innocence, a series in three parts, through Amazon Prime.

Karin has just sent a message that her office will close at 3:00 this afternoon and open at noon tomorrow.

I continue to rest my ankle. I can now limp without crutches around my apartment. I’d not previously detected any bruising on my ankle, but now there is a considerable amount.

1996, the best year in movie history, pt. 11: Fargo

I’ve lain or sat still the last three days. What little movement I’ve performed with the crutches has left my torso, arms, and legs feeling quite sore.

But on Friday I was able to work at IUSB, and this morning I attended church – thanks to Karin.

Soon, I’ll have a few more days off. Wednesday’s windchill will be in the negative thirties (Fahrenheit). I doubt the town will stay open; it closed down for similar weather five years ago.

I figured this would be a good time to review Fargo.

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As David once put it, it isn’t just that each scene in Fargo is good; it’s that each scene is great.

Each scene functions as a self-contained parable or proverb, a miniature reflection upon a great swath of human life.

Many scenes are quotable; one finds oneself applying them to real-life situations:

“Where is pancakes house.”

“Prowler needs a jump.”

“I’m not sure I agree with you a hundred percent on your police work there, Lou.”

“We’re not a bank, Jerry.”

And my personal favorite, a sensible response to one character’s angry query, How do you split a car? With a f---ing chainsaw?:

“One of us pays the other for half.”

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Like the biblical parables, Fargo’s are played out against a particular folk background – in this case, that of wholesome, hardworking Minnesotans. It’s only the movie’s opening scene, a negotiation between criminals, that takes place in Fargo, North Dakota. My theory about the title is that it’s meant to suggest how perilously near the North Star State is to being infected with Dakotan lawlessness. (Think of a movie called Sodom but set in Jerusalem.)

Fargo is a noir in blinding white. Much of it takes place out of doors, along highways or in parking lots perpetually covered in snow. Many of the characters have smiles frozen upon their faces.

One of them, a car salesman, is trying to mask his inner desperation. He has committed fraud and covered it with more fraud. Now, he’s trying to avoid financial ruin by hiring two freakish lowlifes to kidnap his own wife.

After a few bullying words from the lowlifes, he knows it’s a mistake. But he’s too timid – and too desperate – to cancel the deal. (Later, when he tries to, it’s too late.)

A more conventional noir would have told the story just from the salesman’s perspective. Fargo delights in following the two hired kidnappers – an odd couple if there ever was one. They don’t just fail to trust each other; it’s as if they’ve been mismatched by the universe. (Much bleak humor comes of this.) Nor do the kidnappers collaborate well with the dismally cheery salesman who’s hired them.

What all three of these very different villains have in common is their utter ruthlessness, their disregard for others when their own skins are in the slightest peril. Also, their greed.

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Each of the villains is vivid, even iconic. But the movie’s chief interest lies elsewhere.

The villains are important because they represent a magnetic pole of depravity. What the movie really wants to determine is whether ordinary, law-abiding people – the ones who aren’t yet thoroughly rotten – can resist the magnetism of that pole.

The question is like the one that troubles Abraham: how can Lot, or any man who lives so near to Sodom, remain righteous?

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One man who fails the righteousness test is an unnamed witness to the kidnappers’ malfeasance.

In a terrifying night-time scene, this witness is pursued down a country road. He drives his car into a ditch. He climbs out; he flees, stumbling, out into a dark, freezing field.

But he doesn’t get far. His pursuer shoots him dead.

Then, with horror, we realize that this victim has left behind a passenger in the car, trapped and defenseless. The man has abandoned her to save his own skin.

It’s all the worse because we don’t know these victims’ names. They could have been any driver, any passenger. Their anonymity makes them representative of the entire human race.

The driver’s selfishness and cowardice belong to every man.

In miniature, this scene retells the story of the car salesman, who has given little thought to sacrificing his own wife.

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Two other characters are tested who are not initially beyond the pale.

The first is the car salesman’s father-in-law: a self-made rich man. It’s his money that the car salesman wishes to obtain through the kidnapping of his wife.

This rich old cuss has long kept his daughter’s husband under his thumb. Unlike the car salesman, he isn’t a coward. He’s stately: he expects lesser beings to submit to him.

Nor are his demands unreasonable: he’s the sort of man who relies upon and invokes the law.

But when the time comes to ransom his daughter, will he be willing to part with his money?

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The second character is the law. Played by Frances McDormand, she is Marge Gunderson, small-town police chief, pregnant wife of Norm Gunderson (John Carroll Lynch). Marge is capable and good. But, I believe, this movie is the story of her temptation, though it is not highlighted as such.

It’s hinted that Marge is becoming a bit of a celebrity. Suddenly, she’s on TV discussing the aforementioned murders. People in the Twin Cities notice her. One of them, Mike Yanagita (Steve Park), an old schoolmate, calls her up in the middle of the night. Rather than dismiss him, she is flattered.

She travels to the Twin Cities – ostensibly on police business, but also to have a date with Mike.

Viewers have complained about this subplot. None of the parties comes out of it looking especially good. And what has it to do with the crime?

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Roger Ebert suggests that when Marge catches Mike in a lie, she’s able to see that the car salesman also has been lying to her, which allows her to solve the case. I don’t disagree, but the more important question is why Marge, normally so shrewd, has agreed to meet Mike at all. Is she merely nostalgic for her schooldays? Is she romantically interested in her old friend? Is she dissatisfied with her unglamorous husband, who stays at home and paints ducks for postage stamps?

For that matter, as far as the movie is concerned, why is Marge married? Is it just to flesh out her character a bit, in the grand tradition of movie cops with pathetic spouses? Or is there a more interesting reason?

I believe that like Abraham, the movie is surveying the land for one righteous person. And so Marge, the likeliest candidate, is measured against the car salesman, the paradigm of depravity.

And what was that salesman’s most grievous sin? He betrayed his spouse.

(Lot also abandoned his wife, not even looking back when she was turned into a pillar of salt.)

To remain righteous, Marge must refrain from betraying her husband; but for this to count in her favor, she must be tested.

This choice of Marge’s is what gives the movie its thematic tension and unity. The other major characters, more or less predictably, get pulled toward destruction. Marge has the capability to resist; but she, too, must go through her temptation episode.

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I’ve long thought that the Mike Yanagita scenes are at the movie’s heart, but I haven’t been able to articulate why; plot-wise, they’re tangential. On this latest viewing, I think I’ve figured out the right connection. What matters isn’t what Marge comes to realize about the car salesman through her interaction with Mike Yanagita. What matters is what she realizes about herself.

Why, then, has she been tested with such a sorry carrot as Mike Yanagita? He’d seem easy to resist.

The answer is that this is in the nature of temptation: the sorry prize only seems sorry after depravity is recognized for what it is.

A past blast; a chill spill

Anticipating next month’s Super Bowl, I watched the title game of the NFL’s 1985/’86 season (Super Bowl XX). Despite its violence, it was a tedious contest. It felt like a walkthrough for the Bears. They led the Patriots 23–3 by halftime and 44–3 by the end of the third quarter. In the fourth quarter, they brought in their reserves, one of whom forced a safety. The final score was 46–10.

Four Super Bowls later, the 49ers beat the Broncos, 56–10. I’ve also viewed sections of that historic snoozer. I think the Bears were more dominant in their Super Bowl victory.

Moreover, they had some real freaks: Gault, the speedster; Perry, the giant; a relentless defensive line; an intelligent, hard-hitting defensive backfield; McMahon, with his cannonlike arm and fiery temper; and Payton, the running back who, more than anyone else on the field, liked to hit. Back then, tacklers were allowed to strike with their heads; downfield blockers routinely aimed below the knee; and, of course, there were fewer protections for receivers and quarterbacks. The punishment meted out to Steve Grogan, the Patriots’ backup quarterback, shocked my modern sensibility. (Grogan actually played well, I thought.)

One thing I know about the ’85/’86 Bears is, those guys went on to live in a world of pain.

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I myself am in a world of pain this evening. Walking home from work, I took a longish route to avoid the worst ice patches, but just a few yards from my building, I fell and badly sprained my ankle. It crunched like when a bicycle changes gears.

I lay on the ice for a good ten minutes. Some other tenants stood around the parking lot and ignored me. Finally, a nice, chubby guy came out of his apartment, helped me off the ground, and walked me into my building.

I called Karin and she left her work and took me to get x-rayed. No fractures – just a sprain. But I can’t walk. One of my old pastors lent me a pair of crutches.

Prospecting

About zero degrees Fahrenheit today. I stayed inside; I was on holiday, thanks to Martin Luther King. Karin & I did go out for supper, and I felt the cold then. I barely made it to the car.

A lovely philosophic job is advertised in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, in Marquette – a Lake Superior port town, four hours east of Duluth, eight hours from South Bend if one travels through Illinois and Wisconsin. Its hills and lake are beautiful, and its wooden sports dome is the world’s largest. But the cold! The snow! The darkness! If I barely can endure them here, how could I there?

This job was advertised a year ago as well; I wonder if that school has trouble attracting (or retaining) employees.

Another possible job – in Texas, not far from Ana & David – is in a nicer clime but would expire after a year or two.

Without the Ph.D., no job offer is likely to materialize; but I talked last week with my adviser, and we both realized that I am very close to finishing (though the degree probably wouldn’t be conferred until the end of May).

My dear son

Four years ago this week, Karin adopted Jasper. He used to be a small thing:


And now, this is how he looks:


In this next photo, he’s resting in his cat tree; Ziva, his little sister, lies near to him on the couch.


And in this video, Jasper grooms her:


We gave both kitties some tuna tonight, in celebration.

January’s poem

For the new year, the beginning of the Odyssey:

⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯
Tell me about a complicated man.
Muse, tell me how he wandered and was lost
when he had wrecked the holy town of Troy,
and where he went, and who he met, the pain
he suffered in the storms at sea, and how
he worked to save his life and bring his men
back home. He failed to keep them safe; poor fools,
they ate the Sun God’s cattle, and the god
kept them from home. Now, goddess, child of Zeus,
tell the story for our modern times.
Find the beginning.
⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯

Newly translated by Emily Wilson. “Tell me about a complicated man.”

Quito is #1

For the first time since I was born (or maybe since the nineteenth century? the colonial era? the beginning of history?), Quito is Ecuador’s most populous city. At the end of last year, it had more than 2.7 million inhabitants.

Guayaquil, previously the largest city, also cleared the 2.7 million-person threshold, but with some 18,000 fewer inhabitants than Quito.

Read about it here.

I was born in Quito in 1981. Back then, its population was about one million, give or take a couple hundred thousand. During my short life – and I haven’t even been in Ecuador since 2010 – Quito has come to seem much huger than it used to, and more modern and sophisticated.

It always seemed polluted and blindingly bright, but now it has days when there are public warnings about the ultraviolet radiation.

It is also beautiful.

Reprieve’s end

It was a warm Christmas and New Year’s. But new snow has landed, and outside – where I haven’t gone the last couple of days – it looks like a different world. Tomorrow I’ll trek to IUSB to return some library books. On Monday, I’ll resume my job.

My philosophizing has made great strides in my mind, but not on the page.

Most nights, I dream about it.

Karin’s bible reading

“Genesis offers many interesting tidbits,” says Karin.

She has begun a new reading cycle, using a one-year bible (New Living Translation, 1996).

She reads to me:

“The valley was filled with tar pits. And as the army of the kings of Sodom and Gomorrah fled, some slipped into the tar pits, while the rest escaped into the mountains” (Genesis 14:10).

You could place your finger onto the text at random and, more often than not, end up with some such tidbit.

Why tar pits?

Their precise spiritual significance is not clear to us. We can only speculate what this passage meant to early readers.

Or, maybe, there is no spiritual significance: the tar pits are mere literary props, included for the sake of drawing the reader into the story, in the way that certain Swedish mystery novelists mention their detectives’ every cup of coffee.

Or, maybe, the tar pits really existed at that location, some people’s slipping into them was a plain fact, and Genesis records it for that reason alone.

Karin then reads a psalm. She comments: “You know, Sweetie, King David was kind of a weird dude, weeping almost every night.”

Not so weird, I think.

Elizabeth Anderson

The philosopher Elizabeth Anderson is the subject of two recent articles in The New Yorker.

The newer article, published this week, surveys her career and personality.

The older one, published in September, reviews her book Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don’t Talk about It), which is built around her 2015 Tanner Lectures.

In all the time I was at Cornell, Anderson gave what I thought was the best talk by a visiting speaker. Its content was incorporated into her book The Imperative of Integration.

Her best-known article is “What Is the Point of Equality?”; her first book, Value in Ethics and Economics, is much cited.

I’ve never had occasion to assign her political writings in my classes. But I did assign her 2007 article “If God Is Dead, Is Everything Permitted?” in a class that I taught on the philosophy of religion. (This article is one of the best in the celebrated anthology Philosophers without Gods: Meditations on Atheism and the Secular Life; it also appears in Christopher Hitchens’s The Portable Atheist. Anderson’s colleague at the University of Michigan, Edwin Curley, presents a similar argument in a fascinating exchange with Peter van Inwagen, in the anthology Divine Evil? The Moral Character of the God of Abraham.)

I’m glad to see Anderson’s work noticed in the popular press. Her recent writings, especially, are very easy to understand. And her arguments tend to be motivated by lived experience rather than by esoteric considerations. I sometimes wonder how this or that view of hers, not widely held nor even previously articulated, could ever have failed to be among the top contenders in popular debate.