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A Fun Time at the Frost Fair, and Other News
By
Dan Piepenbring
January 8, 2016
On the Shelf
Mehetabel Lovell
, a 1740 frost-fair souvenir. Image via
Slate
Over the course of the “Little Ice Age” that befell Europe some centuries back, the River Thames froze twenty-three times—such an unlikely occurrence that people had no choice but to party on the ice.
These “frost fairs” often lasted for days; people set up tents and printers commemorated the occasion by selling letterpressed sheets of souvenir paper
. “The men who dragged their presses onto the ice and produced these keepsakes were a competitive lot, each trying to offer the most enticing product … Promiscuity and sexual license were constitutive elements of the frost fair … Some of the tents set up on the ice were brothels.”
Five booksellers and publishers have gone missing in Hong Kong, and
their disappearance may be linked to a contentious manuscript about China’s president
. “The book’s title was being debated by the publisher before the abductions … The two choices were:
The Lovers of Xi Jinping
or
Xi Jinping and His Six Women
…
It is unclear whether the book alleges Xi had an extramarital affair. As part of his crackdown on corruption since he took office in 2012, Xi has led an anti-corruption campaign that made adultery grounds for banishment from the Communist Party.”
Cognitive behavioral therapy long ago overtook psychoanalysis as the dominant form of therapy—and it had results to back up this dominance. In more recent studies, though, the talking cure has proven increasingly effective. Is it time to bring Freud back into the fold? “In contrast to the meandering conversations of psychoanalysis, a typical CBT exercise might involve filling out a flowchart to identify the self-critical ‘automatic thoughts’ that occur whenever you face a setback … Yet rumblings of dissent from the vanquished psychoanalytic old guard have never quite gone away.
At their core is a fundamental disagreement about human nature—about why we suffer, and how, if ever, we can hope to find peace of mind
… CBT doesn’t exactly claim that happiness is easy, but it does imply that it’s relatively simple: your distress is caused by your irrational beliefs, and it’s within your power to seize hold of those beliefs and change them. Psychoanalysts contend that things are much more complicated. For one thing, psychological pain needs first not to be eliminated, but understood. From this perspective, depression is less like a tumor and more like a stabbing pain in your abdomen: it’s telling you something, and you need to find out what.”
Many of us enjoy a good walk. I myself embarked on a walk this very morning, and plan to walk more throughout the day. But I’ll probably never walk as much, or as far, as Werner Herzog, whose book
Of Walking in Ice
tells of his journey on foot from Munich to Paris in 1974. “‘
Walking on foot brings you down to the very stark, naked core of existence
,’ Herzog told a
Film Comment
interviewer in 1979, a year after
Of Walking in Ice
was first published in Germany. ‘We travel too much in airplanes and cars. It’s an existential quality that we are losing. It’s almost like a credo of religion that we should walk.’ Over the course of many years, and in countless different interviews, Herzog has spoken of his filmmaking—and of walking—in vaguely spiritual, even divine terms (‘It’s like a grace, like a gift of God that has fallen into my lap’).”
In which Ben Lerner pays a visit to the new Whitney’s conservation department: “For many modern and contemporary artists, ephemerality is part of the point. Dieter Roth, to take just one example, didn’t cover his canvases with yogurt for the sake of durability; they were built to biodegrade. Picasso and Braque told friends that they would rather let their canvases deteriorate than have them varnished …
In the absence of explicit and complete instructions—that is, most of the time—conservation is fundamentally an interpretive act
… The work of a conservator can re-sacralize the original art object … Conservation can help produce—not just protect—the aura of the original.”
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