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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

Does the Dreamachine Elude AI? Yes It Does.

November 20, 2024 by Jan Herman

Scholars and specialists addressed ethical and political considerations surrounding AI in collaborations with human creators. Topics ranged from AI aesthetics to the early history of machine learning, from multimedia art to computational research experiments with artificial intelligence, including AI biases and applications.

Fools, Fanatics, and Flunkeys

November 17, 2024 by Jan Herman

“The dodo bird cheered, swaggered, and strutted away.”

Will the ‘Four Freedoms’ Go the Way of the Dodo Bird?

November 10, 2024 by Jan Herman

The Bible gave us the Ten Commandments. The Constitution gave us the first 10 amendments, our Bill of Rights. Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave us the ‘Four Freedoms,’ chiseled in stone at the tip of Roosevelt Island as a monumental reminder of his legacy. Will the monument be all that’s left of his legacy?

David Erdos: ‘The United Hates of America’

November 6, 2024 by Jan Herman

You can be sure his poem will not be read at the Orange Turd’s coronation.

A Second Look
Touched by a Documentary Ode to Nelson Algren

October 27, 2024 by Jan Herman

'Ticket to New Jersey: A Portrait of Nelson Algren' by Jan Herman

Some years ago I criticized Michael Caplan’s documentary ode to Nelson Algren as the cinematic equivalent of a pop tart. Now that I’ve had another look I see that I was very wrong.

Human Figuration as an Expression of Ideas

October 21, 2024 by Jan Herman

These drawings move across centuries, from the Middle Ages to our blighted times in an unflinching rawness that gives no comfort. Nothing is omitted. You will find the sexual inscribed like watermarks of passion and anguish. The demonic appears in equal measure with the angelic. Most of all, not unlike cave drawings of prehistoric times, they are an existential record of a particular creature, Bellaart by name.

‘What Is There to Frighten Us?’

October 16, 2024 by Jan Herman

th​e world’s condition
was never intended
to forego the pleasure
of a passing hope

Lionel Ziprin: ‘One of the Secret Heroes of Our Time’

October 14, 2024 by Jan Herman

“I am not an artist. I am not an
outsider. I am a citizen of the
republic and I have remained
anonymous all the time by choice.”

I Guess It Had to Happen

October 9, 2024 by Jan Herman

Julian Peters has done Poe, Rimbaud, Frost, Keats, Dylan Thomas, Wordsworth, Oscar Wilde, Villon, Yeats, Sassoon, and plenty of others — and they’re all damn well done — so why not T.S. Eliot?

‘Dear Willy’ Tells a War Tale of Love and Hope

September 29, 2024 by Jan Herman

The letters that Hollywood director William Wyler and his wife Talli wrote to each other during World War II are the basis of a new documentary directed by Taylor Alexander.

Underground Railroad: Walt Whitman Bears Witness

September 16, 2024 by Jan Herman

… to “the runaway slave” in his most famous poem, “Song of Myself,” which first appeared untitled in his self-published collection Leaves of Grass, in 1855.

One More Missive from the Department of Letters

September 10, 2024 by Jan Herman

Nelson Algren (photo illustration from 'Algren')

By popular demand, here’s another letter from Nelson Algren, this time a big fat gossipy one apparently in reply to questions that Roger Groening must have posed.

Not a Bad Way to Start the Week

September 9, 2024 by Jan Herman

Cleaning out one of my desk drawers, I came across a long-forgotten file folder containing a ream of letters from Nelson Algren to Roger Groening. They are a motherlode of humor, wit, and edifying entertainment, and from time to time I will post more of his letters to Roger..

‘The glide begins, direction down …’

August 29, 2024 by Jan Herman

THE HAPPY GIRL
The glide begins, direction down,
the happy girl has gone to hell.
She lies in bed, her mouth an O,
her breath a whisper of dissent.

They Come at Night

August 15, 2024 by Jan Herman

'Morose Delectation' © 1981 by Gerard Bellaart

WHISPERS

the face
that launched
a thousand ships
has sailed
and not in beauty

War Crime Outcomes —
Two Coverups in the Slaughterhouse of War

July 29, 2024 by Jan Herman

From the podcast IN THE DARK: “On November 19, 2005, a small group of U.S. Marines killed 24 civilians in Haditha, Iraq. The case against them would become one of the most high-profile war-crimes prosecutions in American history, and then it would all fall apart. … No one was held accountable.” Why not?

On March 16, 1968, more than 500 Vietnamese men, women, and children in the village of Mi Lai were slaughtered by a platoon of U.S. soldiers. It became known as the Mi Lai massacre. The soldiers were led by Lieutenant William Calley. He was later court-martialed and convicted of murder after an Army cover-up.

D. H. Lawrence on the ‘Bitch-Goddess of Success’

July 23, 2024 by Jan Herman

The other day I took a drive over to Toby Pond and looked in at the house where I’d spent six months during the Covid lockdown. My favorite room there was a little library. It had two steep book-lined walls and high windows that gave plenty of light for reading. With nothing better to do, I pulled down Lady Chatterly’s Lover. Having read it many years ago, I had failed to appreciate it. This time it bowled me over. Here’s a small excerpt. It offers a taste of one of the novel’s major themes.

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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