-W W'' 7W7, T 0- BooK EXCERPT Writing Ann Arbor: A Literary Anthology Edited by Laurence Goldstein Courtesy of The University of Michigan Press, Copyright 2005 In Ann Arbor's 181-year history, the city has inspired a number of essays, poems and short stories. The city, and later the University, has inspired a broad range of writers - from world- renowned author Robert Frost to countless local authors. In his anthology, Laurence Goldstein attempts to collect the best and most interesting works while intentionally avoiding the more well- known authors and their pieces. - Chris Gaerig The public history of a city can be writ- ten by a single author, but its inner history - the story of its cultural evolution, the ever-unfinished portrait of its shape-shift- ing identity - can only be written by a composite author ... That Ann Arbor is a realm apart from reality makes perfect sense when one con- siders the qualities of an intellectual cul- ture. A world of ideas - of argument, or spirited discourse, of new and subversive formulations about everything - is indeed a glass house through which the inhabit- ants catch sight of a different world than the one presented by conventional wisdom. That is one function of a university. Liv- ing in a privileged place, one can become accustomed to thinking that the rest of the world conforms to the shape of one's own experience, rather like the old woman in Nancy Willard's novel Sister Water who thinks that everything she sees on televi- sion is happening in Ann Arbor. For stu- dents especially, the retraction of parental monitoring creates an enchanted and lib- erated space for powerful dreaming, for radical new forms of self-definition and community action ... So 'reality' gets changed in the process and not just by being put in ironizing quota- tion marks. At a time when 70 percent of all Americans attend some institution of higher education, the surrounding world of hard knocks and lifelong opportunities is constantly reshaped by the ideas percolating in the university and pouring into the world outside the ivied walls. Surely the relation- ship is a symbiotic one. When John F. Ken- nedy visited Ann Arbor in 1960 to announce his idea for a Peace Corps on the steps of the Michigan Union, and when Lyndon Johnson came four years later to propose the creation of 'Great Society' during a commencement address in the football stadium, the dreams of an older establishment mingled with the radical ideas fostered on campus to -gener- ate an innovative and potent sea change in the cultural life of this nation and the world beyond ... But there is more to being human then being intellectual. It would be a gross dis- tortion of the literary record if an editor filled his anthology with writings about ideas, all-important as they are. It's fair to say that the majority of writings about the university, from first to last, focus on two other aspects of the academic condition: sports and recreational social life. There is no overestimating the passion of football, especially, in Ann Arbor, around the state of Michigan and in the hearts of alumni throughout the world. Football appears as a leitmotif in this anthology, first appear- ing in the nineteenth century-(though it's interesting to note in a novel of 1899 that baseball had more respect on campus) and carrying forward into the fiction of Charles Baxter and Elwood Reid and the poetry of Donald Hall ... And then there are the infinitely complex social relations, on and off campus, under- taken by young people spending four or more years of their lives in the privileged space of an academic milieu. I have cho- sen brief samples of fiction from the nine- teenth century to demonstrate the earlier forms of what might be called affiliations, be they same-sex (fraternities, sororities, dormitories) or, more often, mixed-gender dynamics (dances, courtship, professional rivalries) ... Some writers nostalgically depict Ann Arbor as a sort of utopian open society, a crucible of soul making that prepares the individual to withstand the pressures of the outer world. This view of the educational experience nourishes the iconography of the ivory tower. Other writers who revisit Ann Arbor in their memoirs see the matter with more complexity. Ann Arbor, in this view, is part and parcel of the everyday con- flicts of the rest of the world, and what is most happily remembered is the vehemence AOS) (dq with which the creative spirit struggled - in classrooms, in dorm rooms, in frater- nity lounges, in the offices of the Michigan Daily or the Union or the Administration Building - against the temptation toward passivity and indifference ... Someday every remarkable place in the world will have its own anthology. Now it is Ann Arbor's turn - and the present offer- ing is only the beginning." The Weekend List Friday 11.18.05 a , m;; «' x :- t _: A.. '.. , i' ': : "v I;' ii, i . ? . 3 ComCo The University improv group will present a variety of sketch comedy routines in their per- formance titled "WTF Happened to TGIF?" The performances will take place tomorrow and Saturday from 8 to 10 p.m. at the U-Club in the Michigan Union. $2 at the door. The Laramie Project The Laramie Project: The Department of Theatre and Drama will present this play about hate crimes in a small town. The per- formances will take place tomorrow and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are $22 and $16 ($9 with a student ID) and can be purchased at the Michigan League Tick- et Office or online through www.music. umich.edu. Harmonettes The all-female a cappella group's concert will also feature a performance by the dance troupe Groove. The performance will take place at 8 p.m. at the Pendleton Room at the Michigan Union. Tickets at the door are $6 for students and $8 for adults. Pippin MUSKET, the university's student-run musical theatre group, will present this play about King Charlemagne's son adjusting to new responsibilities and learning about himself. The performance will take place tomorrow and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sun- day at 2 p.m. at the Power Center. Tickets are $7 for students and $13 for all others and can be purchased at the Michigan Union Ticket Office. Saturday 11.19,05 the door or by calling (734) 764-1448. Nomo The 17-member band will perform their unique brand of percussion-heavy dance music. The concert will take place at the Blind Pig. Doors open at 9:30 p.m. $8 cover. $10 cover for under 21. 18 and over only. Concertante The chamber-music group will perform works from Strauss and Brahms. The per- formance will take place at 8 p.m. at Rack- ham Auditorium. Tickets are $18 to $36 and can be purchased at MUTO. Men's Glee Club Concert One of the nation's oldest men's glee clubs will present their 146th annual concert. The performance will take place at 8 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Tickets are $10 and $15 ($5 with a student ID) and can be purchased at Sunday 11.20.05 $1F t~ a. g 't,1l } tiL i ... tjlhgq s { t qJ~)lI ir f lq a t ftv . 6ei. Pool Tournament Eight-ball is the game of choice for this monthly students-only billiards event. The tournament will begin at 1:45 p.m. in the Billiards Room at the Michigan Union. The cost is $5 to pre-register or $10 the weekend of the tournament. A JAt\ Y ~coic~ K .~.. S ? oP SU. d ~1 +SrC.XIr V4 3S~ 1.t{ XY -,L.Jo; \A1,0111,1ClcA.e9 q S .+.af k !y { f \ (: C3LM'A 4B - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 17, 2005 The Michigan Daily -