You Are Here Columbus

The blog of the social collective of Arawak City, Ohio.

06 May 2009

ATTRACTIONS.JORDAN+CRANDALL.HOTEL.042209




My hotel room is perched at the intersection of two freeways, and, with the window open to let in the hot summer air, I can hear the comforting hum of traffic. I have just gotten out of the shower and am staring at myself in the mirror, deciding whether or not to shave. I hear a knock on the door: it must be room service. With a towel around my waist, I open the door for the waiter, who wheels in my breakfast cart. At the opening of the door, the curtains billow and the warm breeze animates the room. The waiter nervously fusses with the plates and flatware. I sign the check and thank him. He opens the door to exit the room. But the breeze does not stop, and out of the corner of my eye, I notice that he is closing the door very slowly, in order that he can watch my reflection in the hallway mirror. The wind channel remains open. Momentarily, I catch a glimpse of his eye in the mirror and I sense the intensity of his attraction. Does his desire arise because of, or in spite of, the limits placed on it - by the social contract, and by his employer? Still in my towel, I take my breakfast plate from the cart and walk over to the chair. As I approach the seat, I realize that my towel has loosened. I am holding the plate with both hands and so I do not catch the towel. Rather, I let it fall. Standing, plate in hand, with my back to the door, I feel the gaze of the waiter upon me. I bask in the familiar glow of this look. Like the warm sunshine beaming in from the window, cast against my skin, it affords me a blanket of comfort. Yet at the same time it dispossesses me. Centeredness and dispersal, life and death, as part of the same circuit. I sense the struggle is which he is engaged - how long can he remain, peering through a gap in the door, before he is discovered, whether by me, another hotel guest, or his boss? Embodying the struggle, he monitors himself. A space of tension has opened up, a gap that only assumes its potency through the impending threat of its closure, and of its subject's exposure. Perhaps his body takes shape, as mine does, through the contouring properties of this space. It informs him, gives form to him. Like the billowing curtains, shaped by the morning breeze - arising only because of the wind channel established by the open window and the cracked door. Self-consciously, I stand there, and slowly begin to eat from my plate. The curtains undulate. The clacking of my fork beats time like a metronome, as the erotic energy - always compositional, rhythmic - circulates through the room with the hot summer air.

via version.org

experimental communities

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a literary tracing of our collective social nightmare



Steve Shaviro's tribute to recently deceased JG Ballard:

“The suburbs dream of violence” (opening line of Kingdom Come), of a vast convulsion which the imagine as a purgative or transformational Event. Ballard’s great subject, in his final four novels, is the hollowness of this dream, the emptiness and inevitable disappointment of any fidelity to the Event, every bit as much as of any loyalty to the ruling order....

The only (very slender) hope that his novels offer is a hope in the value in itself of a disillusioned and demystified clarity of regard...


via The Pinocchio Theory

the myth of the west



A slideshow review of the following exhibit:

Into the Sunset: Photography’s Image of the American West

via However Fallible

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You Are Here

Kirwan Institute Panel Discussion on the Death Penalty in Ohio

Media Advisory from the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity:

April 27, 2009
Panel Discussion: Ohio author and journalist, defense attorney, and sentencing expert discuss death penalty. Race, politics and the geography of Ohio’s death penalty will be the topic of a panel discussion on Saturday, May 9, from 2–4 p.m. at the Moritz College of Law, Saxbe Auditorium, 55 W. 12th Ave., in Columbus. “Perspectives on Ohio’s Death Penalty,” which will examine this issue from various viewpoints, is hosted by The Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at The Ohio State University. The panel of speakers will include:

Andrew Welsh-Huggins, a reporter with the Associated Press in Columbus, Ohio, and author of No Winners Here Tonight: Race Politics, and Geography in One of the Country’s Busiest Death Penalty States (Ohio University Press, 2009). Welsh-Huggins’ book focuses on the history of the death penalty in Ohio, which is noted as having an active use of capital punishment. The book also explores the impact of race on Ohio court decisions.

Tim Young, Director of the Office of the Ohio Public Defender. Young was appointed as Ohio Public Defender in January 2008, after serving as a Deputy Director of the Montgomery County Public Defender’s Office. He is an alumnus of the University of Dayton School of Law.

Doug Berman, William B. Saxbe Designated Professor at Moritz College of Law. During the 1999-2000 school year, Professor Berman received The Ohio State University Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching. He is the author of the prominent Sentencing Law and Policy blog. He attended Princeton University and Harvard Law School.

Andrew Grant-Thomas, Deputy Director of the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, will serve as moderator.

The death penalty continues to be one of the most contentious issues in the United States. Recently, New Mexico became the second state to abolish capital punishment since 2007 and the 15th state to abandon the practice, a decision that has resulted in strong reactions from proponents and opponents alike. The ongoing debate on this issue is especially relevant in Ohio, which has a long history with the death penalty and has carried out a total of 371 executions, 28 in the modern era. Ohio has exonerated five men from death row. “A system meant to be fair turned out, contrary to lawmakers’ expectations, to be subject to the same frailties as the rest of the criminal justice system – capricious, uneven, and dependent on the most nonjudicial of factors, human sentiment,” says Andrew Welsh-Huggins. “In the case of the death penalty, of course, there is no way to resolve those disagreements once the sentence has been carried out. Right or wrong, all decisions are final.” The Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity was established in 2003 as a center for interdisciplinary research at The Ohio State University. The Kirwan Institute partners with people, communities, and institutions worldwide to think about, talk about, and act on race in ways that create and expand opportunity for all. For more information about the Kirwan Institute, go to: http://kirwaninstitute.org/.

Media Contact:
Kathy Baird, Kirwan Institute Communications
Office: (614) 292-8766
Cell: (614) 395-1067
baird.111@osu.edu

About

This blog serves as a transparent point of discourse for You Are Here--a Columbus collective that grew out of the Comparative Studies Undergraduate Group at the Ohio State University. It consists of people from all academic and social backgrounds with an emphasis on social theory. Most succinctly put, it is creative scholarship in affect--whether it be from academia, popular culture, art, language, or personal observation. The ideas expressed in this blog are by no means reached by consensus and do not necessarily reflect those of other members. The comments doubly so. Feel free to critique, question, or agree with any views expressed. You don't have to reside in or be familiar with the city of Columbus. As far as we're concerned, you are here.