This is Violence

“You can be shaped, or you can be broken. There is not much in between.”

-David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest (via nomoreundead)

“The point of grammar is to facilitate clear and precise communication, to make language reflect thought and intention as closely as possible. On that front, a lot of colloquial bad grammar is actually GOOD grammar. I think focusing on grammar for grammar’s sake is a mistake.”

-

John Green (via runalovegood)

This guy gets it.

(via sylviawrath)

Someone needs to tell all the AP kids….

(via zeenie)

I think this is mostly true, but not entirely true.

As someone who’s grasp of even basic grammatical rules is fleeting at best, and who is a fairly firm believer in power of slang and colloquialisms, and who only recently acquiesced to using apostrophes in possessives (I’m a child of the IM era), I recently had my eyes opened to an additional factor in this discussion by way of David Wallace’s essay “Tense Present” which is: the baseline effectiveness of relaying a concept is only part of the equation. Your choice of words and the way you structure them are also a critical aspect how you convey what you’re thinking in the context of the reader.

In this way, I think using slang and colloquialisms are 100% acceptable as long as their meaning as signifiers of larger concepts is something you want your reader to infer - like in Infinite Jest, for example (to stay with the DWF thing). If on the other hand, you’re writing for an audience that doesn’t use that sort of language you should make the choice to use it conscious of what you’re signifying by doing so.

(via zeenie)

“An ad that pretends to be art is — at absolute best — like somebody who smiles warmly at you only because he wants something from you. This is dishonest, but what’s sinister is the cumulative effect that such dishonesty has on us: since it offers a perfect facsimile or simulacrum of goodwill without goodwill’s real spirit, it messes with our heads and eventually starts upping our defenses even in cases of genuine smiles and real art and true goodwill. It makes us feel confused and lonely and impotent and angry and scared. It causes despair.”

-David Foster Wallace (via graceyu)

“Anyone who thinks that artists create great pieces of work because of, rather than despite, their crushing mental illnesses, has never experienced the kind of depression that leads someone to suicide.”

-david foster wallace | Tumblr

japage83: Homemade (I think) video of the late genius, David Foster Wallace. I often think about this clip as I write.

(Source: moonlightrebel)

Infinite Jest Summer Reading Team

Text Message. May 12th, 2011 7:31pm

Me: Just finished the title essay in Consider the Lobster and was nearly certain you wrote the first part of it. I could hear you saying the exact same things.

Dave: Wow. Now I have to go reread that. I wish I could say anything he does

Me: You should and do.

Me: As a side note — I wonder if college professors get just inundated with DWF-affected papers as students start reading him. I bet it’s annoying.

Dave: Ha. I bet you’re right.

Me: Incidentally, the bit I’m reading right now concerns the sort of cruel effect iconification of writers has on people’s ability to understand the humanity of their writing.

Dave: He was slightly self aware!

Me: Just slightly…

Me: I feel like we HAVE to do our book club.

Dave: Agreed

Dave: We should co-author a thing: long form responses to each week.

Dave: With footnotes

Me: I was thinking EXACTLY the same thing.


And THAT is how the Infinite Jest Summer Reading Team was born.

In the spirit of Infinite Summer, me and 4 3 2 (it’s a pretty big commitment…) other people are going to be reading Infinite Jest together from now (actually two weeks ago) until early October.

Any way, between trying to keep up on my reading and getting my thoughts on the book published in a timely manner, my already infrequent posts here might be even less for a bit. On the plus side, you can follow along with our adventure over at the IJSRT blog and watch us stumble through all this from the safety of your own computer.