Archive for the 'The Arts' Category

The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows…

A beautiful, dark, much appreciated creative project about words and emotions.

 

Welcome to The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows…

 

“The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows is a compendium of invented words written by John Koenig. Each original definition aims to fill a hole in the language—to give a name to emotions we all might experience but don’t yet have a word for.

 

The author’s mission is to capture the aches, demons, vibes, joys and urges that roam the wilderness of the psychological interior. Each sorrow is bagged, tagged and tranquilized, then released gently back into the subconscious.”

 

Peruse it here.

 

Visit the facebook page to hear the backstory behind each word

 

 

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The “Manual” on how to rebuild civilization after an apocalypse…

Old_Library_by_Forozan

 

What books do you think humanity would need (or want) to rebuild things after a global apocalypse? The Long Now Foundation has been pondering this question, and they have asked some great modern day thinkers to curate lists of books for their  MANUAL FOR CIVILIZATION. The actual books themselves will be housed in the new library at the INTERVAL salon space — a San Francisco cocktail bar/library for contemplating the Long Term.

 

Here is a bit about Brain Pickings‘ Maria Popova’s reading list for the Manual of Civilization:

 

33 Books on How to Live: My Reading List for the Long Now Foundation’s Manual for Civilization

by Maria Popova

 

Books that help us make sense of ourselves, our world, and our place in it.

 

“In a recent piece about the Manual for Civilization — the Long Now Foundation’s effort to assemble 3,500 books most essential for sustaining or rebuilding humanity, as part of their collaboratively curated library of 3,500 books for long-term thinking — I lamented the fact that Stewart Brand’s 76-book contribution to the Manual contained only one and a half books authored by a woman. To their credit, the folks at the Long Now reached out immediately, inviting me to contribute my own list to the collaborative library they’re building.

 

In grappling with the challenge, I faced a disquieting and inevitable realization: The predicament of diversity is like a Russian nesting doll — once we crack one layer, there’s always another, a fractal-like subdivision that begins at the infinite and approaches the infinitesimal, getting exponentially granular with each layer, but can never be fully finished…”

 

 

Click here for the list, and more. Learn more about The Long Now and its Manual for Civilization here.

 

 

 

 

 

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The Skin Books of Harvard Library

Every good story of witchcraft or evil should, at some point, include a creepy book. These real books  discovered at Harvard fit the bill…

 

skinbook

 

Harvard discovers three of its library books are bound in human flesh (Roadtrippers)

 

“There’s something undeniably creepy about big, expansive libraries. The hushed whispers, the almost artificial quiet, and the smell of dusty tomes combine to create a surreal experience. But when it comes to creepy libraries, Harvard University might take the cake… you see, three of its books are bound in human skin…”

 

For the complete story and more photos, click here.

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