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


Wednesday, April 04, 2012
I remember hearing on the evening news (on the little black and white TV we moved back and forth from the dining room to the kitchen) that Martin Luther King had been assassinated. Even pre-RFK it didn't seem that surprising since JFK's assassination was, for me anyhow, the standard for what the real world, the world-historical world, was like. So of course people were assassinated all the time. I think this was a combination of the routine of shots of wounded and dying soldiers on nightly TV with the sense of all major political news as news of violence. Thinking back on it now, it seems odd that I felt this way even before RFK's murder; though I remember what was so surprising about Reagan and Hinkley was that Reagan survived. The two attempts on Ford's life were stopped before he was shot, but it seemed (especially after RFK) that the rules were: if you got shot, you died. And the other rule, pre-Hinkley but certainly through John Lennon, was that the assassins had three names: Lee Harvey Oswald; Sirhan Bishara Sirhan; Mark David Chapman. (The three named victims of most of them didn't strike me.) So it was no surprise, even though he came before these last two, that King's assassin was James Earl Ray.


posted by William 5:21 PM
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