Ken Smith
Ken Smith
@ksmith@akakensmith.com

These pieces were not written by the late British poet, Ken Smith (1938-2003), nor the other Ken Smiths who make bass guitars, study marine biology, sell cars, teach card counting, paint war scenes in oils, guide bear hunters in Idaho, teach forest management, study immunology, do war reporting, sell real estate, photograph nature, teach cryptology, provide legal counsel to the gay and lesbian community, realign the spines of athletes, listen for seismic faults in the Sierra Nevadas, operate a 4-axis milling machine, work for sustainable development in Alberta, play blackjack, or criticize Junk English. Nor were the pieces written by the Ken Smith who is “the Elvis Costello of Landscape Architecture” nor the one who serves in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives nor the one who hit a home run for the Atlanta Braves in 1983. I only wish.

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  • A brief introduction to Elise and Otto Hampel

    Elise and Otto were working class people living in Hitler’s Berlin, in wartime. Elise’s brother died in the German army invading France. They could find no justification for his death for such a cause, and they became political but had no skills, no allies, no hope of political action in Berlin. They decided to leave…

  • The logic of linking

    This is the not-original-with-me understanding of linking that I share with the web writers in my class.

  • A great jar-field: Twitter

    People complain about social media in one breathe and confess they haven’t used it in the next. Here’s Tina Fey doing that particular two-step in a video shared by a blogger who confesses to having once danced that prejudicial dance himself. At the end of his posting, Jonathan Chait delivers a good comment about the…

  • The psychology of the paradigm shift

    Dutch ecologist Frans Vera describes the experience of proposing a new vision for wilderness in Oostvaardersplassen, a region of land reclaimed from the North Sea and eventually turned over to grazing herds as a nature preserve. Reporter Elizabeth Kolbert presents his comment about the challenging process of changing someone’s opinion: “Mostly there’s no trouble as…

  • Democracy, inevitable and otherwise

    In On Democracy, an orderly primer on the history and elements of democratic practice, Robert A. Dahl helps challenge the fatalism or perhaps complacency implied by the large percentage of passive citizens in many western democracies. For one thing, the basic history is alarming: Looking back on the rise and decline of democracy, it is…

  • Crowdsourcing the Beck songbook

    In an NPR interview with Jacki Lydon, songwriter Beck explores the changes when he released not a new album but a collection of new sheet music. The songs live a different sort of life, less isolated within the private realm of the composer or expert, with more input from those usually thought of as the…

  • Playing at adulthood with big words

    Comedian Julie Klausner, in her “How Was Your Week?” podcast, suggested in passing that there are some things–some words–that are of use nowhere but in college. In one episode she says “prurient,” then pauses for a confession. “I never learned to pronounce that word, because you shouldn’t,” Ms. Klausner said, preparing for the pivot. “You…

  • Silencing

    In Anne Applebaum’s NYROB essay* on the ways Communists locked down civil society in Poland shortly after World War II, the general mechanism is described and illustrated by example. First, the general mechanism: …the elimination of all remaining independent social or civic institutions, along with the exclusion from public life of anyone who might still…

  • The problem with professors

    A character in an old Cary Grant movie shares a blunt opinion about the academy. You’re a professor and it’s hard to make you understand anything that ain’t in a book… Well, most of what goes on in the world ain’t in a book. (“People Will Talk”)

  • Democracy Project postings, July 5-8

    I have five new postings on the reborn American Democracy Project site at IU South Bend, small entries with links to recent articles and podcasts that give interesting clues to things that influence the quality of democracy.