I remember / je me souviens
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For those limbic bursts of nostalgia, invented by Proust, miniaturized by Nicholson Baker, and freeze-dried by Joe Brainard in his I remember and by Georges Perec in his Je me souviens.

But there are no fractions, the world is an integer
Like us, and like us it can neither stand wholly apart nor disappear.
When one is young it seems like a very strange and safe place,
But now that I have changed it feels merely odd, cold
And full of interest.
          --John Ashbery, "A Wave"

Sometimes I sense that to put real confidence in my memory I have to get to the end of all rememberings. That seems to say that I forego remembering. And now that strikes me as an accurate description of what it is to have confidence in one's memory.
          --Stanley Cavell, The Claim of Reason


Sunday, April 14, 2002
I remember Profiles in Courage. We had a "junior edition," with a red, white, and blue hard cover. Because my classmate Jonathan Richmond was so into Kennedy (he could recite the inaugural address by heart), I read the profile of the guy who refused to vote to convict Andrew Johnson. I'd also read a book on P.T. 109, and about how Kennedy wrote Profiles in Courage in the hospital. Later, when McHale's Navy was on TV, I connected them because McHale was captain of a PT Boat too. (I remember the Ensign on McHale's Navyas well: a famous comedian and Don Knotts figure. But who was he? And McHale's desk-bound superior, who once went into a Freudian revery -- I think he thought he was talking to a sympathetic shrink, and not one of McHale's men in disguise -- and said, the first time I heard this allusion, "I had a very unhappy childhood." That this should be a salient fact, something that he'd mention, seemed interesting and odd to me.)


posted by william 7:26 AM
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