The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, March 19, 2009 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, March19, 2009 - 3B Finding a sense of place in literature Bear with me: A lot of undergrad- uate students end up writing theses to conclude the best four years of our lives (college, supposedly). But I completed (and finally printed, . bound and turned in) my English the- sis earlier this week, and am only now emerging from my writing-induced fog. The scruffy, KIMBERLY unwashed types CHOU wandering down from Kerrytown or out of FedEx Kinko's toward the bars Monday afternoon were most likely not overenthusiastic students getting a head start on St. Patrick's Day, but members of the thesis cohort finally emerging from the library and into the true bliss of second-semester senior year, blindly turning to the sunlight after one last, brutal all-nighter, like the cave dwellers of Plato's allegory. Let me be indulgent with this column, one last time. I am graduating soon, from this university and from the Daily. Don't worry. And OK, I'm not exactly using this Plato allegory to its fullest - I'm just borrowing its imagery. But hopefully I'm not returning to the cave of ignorance, or the cave-like basement of Ambrosia for further line-editing of hard copy drafts, anytime soon. In my thesis, I explore how the par- ticular socio-historical space that is post-apartheid South Africa plays into the narrative of J.M. Coetzee's novel "Disgrace" as well as readers' volatile reception of the novel in South Africa and abroad. "Disgrace" tells the story of a white South African professor who, after hav- ing an affair with a student (who can be inferred to be non-white), loses his teach- ing post and moves to his daughter's farm in the country. Soon after he arrives, the farm is attacked in a seemingly random act of violence. Three black men rob the house, assault the professor and gang- rape the daughter. Since its publication in 1999, discussion of the novel has been dominated by issues of race and, more specifically, accusations of racist writing, with some of the strongest criticism of the novel coming from Coetzee's South African contemporaries. I will spare you further detail about my project, except to say that, perhaps as an effect of spending so much time preoccupied with the politics of place, I found myself reading books for pleasure that were also, in their own way, con- cerned with place. Even if not dealing with the politics of a particular time and locale - implicitly or explicitly - the fic- tion and non-fiction I've been drawn to lately has made me rethink my concep- tions of cities like New York, Beijing and Los Angeles. Some current favorites are below for those of you also interested in writing where the settingbecomes its own char- acter (or also have abit more free read- ing time at this point second semester.) First up are "Miami," "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" and essays on New York and Los Angeles by Joan Didion - Didion is a writer to whom I return again and again, despite (or perhaps because of) the demands she makes of her readers by sharingthe most lovely and uncomfortable moments of her emotional life. Didion's prose is evoca- tive enough that the anxiety of Howard Hughes is palpable in just her descrip- tion of his film'lot. "Netherland," by Joseph O'Neill - O'Neill's broken love letter to post-9/11 New York, told from the point of view of a Dutch banker whose British wife has (with their young son) left him and his adopted city. There's more to it than that (including cricket, the Chelsea Hotel and childhood in The Hague), but What happens when a thesis leads to a book list. O'Neill's precise rationing of adjectives in describing the commute into, out of and around the boroughs and neighbor- hoods by various modes of transporta- tion was what won me over to a book I wasn't prepared to love. "Ask the Dust" by John Fante - For those who love Charles Bukowski, a writer whose work oozes L.A., note this: Bukowski said of John Fante that he "was my God." Written from the point of view of Fante's alter ego, struggling writer Arturo Bandini, the novel unveils a particular experience of L.A. in the 1930s depictingthe professional and romantic struggles of the protagonist. "Beijing Coma" by Ma Jian - In his fiction of a young man left in a coma for 10 years afterbeingshot during the crackdown on the student democracy demonstrations in Tiananmen Square in 1989, Ma Jian captures the sweaty details of what went on in Beijing the weeks before those photos of students in the path of army tanks went around the world. Chou desperately wanted to give this column footnotes. Tell her to get out of thesis mode at kimberch@umich.edu Crazy Wisdom is a new age bookstore located on Main Street. Wise beyond its years Crazy Wisdom has been a local staple since 1982 By SARA SCHNEIDER Daily Arts Writer Customers wait patiently out- side until the doors are finally unlocked at 11 a.m. One step into Crazy Wisdom Bookstore & Tea Room on Main Street and sooth- ing tunes comfort the ears; the scent of burning incense fills the nose. Among the bookshelves lie jewelry, candles, calendars, incense andcards. Fromupstairs, sounds of grinding coffee and steaming milk invite custom- ers to enjoy the quaint tearoom above. Crazy Wisdom is a truly Ann Arbor location whose new- age offerings are losing their outlandish feel in an increasingly new age-accepting city. While industries are mak- ing organic living more acces- sible to consumers, the gradual shift toward holistic practices is becoming a lucrative market. Despite the increase in corporate support for this lifestyle, the slow change occurred thanks to local businesses providing opportuni- ties for new-age exploration even when holistic practices were not popular. Originally opened in 1982, Crazy Wisdom was bought by current owners,husband and wife Bill Zirinsky and Ruth Schekter, in 1989. The shop moved to its current Main Street location in 1999. The store exclusively hosts' local events, provides holistic products and publishes informa- tion about holistic healing and related topics through its journal available at CrazyWisdom.net. After 20 years of owning th store, Zirinsky is aware of th continual growth of the holisti community. "One way to think of th: business is the outgrowth of 40-year process that began i the '60s," Zirinsky said. "When was a student at U of M in 197 there was a small food co-op, b ideas about organic food, eatin whole grains - those were ne' ideas in the society. Thirty-seve years later, you have hundred of Whole Foods supermarkei around the country." Zirinsky continued, "Essen tially, what was new, what wa kind of nascent, what was a seei has now sprouted." Crazy Wisdom describes itse as "a bookstore about conscious ness." This once seemed strang But in a town like Ann Arbor an in a society that's now unafrai of trying out new ideas, Zirinsk knows the store is no longer a "out there" as it used to be. "What we are selling herei no longer new or avant-garde o cutting edge. It has really sprea throughout the society," Zirin sky said. "We see new customer all the time who are in the fairl early stages of their exploring." Although naturalistic idea appear to be spreading through out society, many students sti don't know places like Crazy Wisdom exist within their commu- nity - even when it's the student presence that allows these busi- nesses to thrive. "We are a quintes- sentially Ann Arbor institution that could exist only probably in le ie is is a in I 1, at g w In Is is r- gs d, lf s- ;e. d d y as is :r d a- rs y as h- ill major university towns around the country," Zirinsky said. "I think the reason is because in a town like Ann Arbor you have many, many people who are interested in the kind of themes that we are interested in." Although Crazy Wisdom has much to offer, Zirinsky and Schekter understand, as Michi- gan alums, how far away Main Street feels for the student popu- lation. "I know that when I was a student here at U of M, I didn't have a car," Schekter said. "I did have abike, but I didn't have that much of a reason to come down to Main Street. I wasn't on a restaurant budget, and actually, Main Street was much sleepier than it is today. It felt far." Realistically, it takes less time to walk to Crazy Wisdom from the Diag than it does to trek to the Big House, but University alum and local musician Alex Greiner agrees that Crazy Wis- dom's location proves to be a bit of a hindrance for students. "Crazy Wisdom is not terri- bly well-known around campus,; for though it be an ideal and quaint study spot, it is quite a hike from the Diag and the stu- dent slums," Greiner said. "It is well respected by locals, as well as students who have ventured so far north of Main Street's res- taurant blocks." Despite its distance, Main Street is an important part of the University's community. It provides a location for venues like The Ark. Included in this scene is Crazy Wisdom, which is often left untapped by students. The store hosts numerous local artists' readings in its tearoom, providing an atmosphere unat- tainable at most performance venues. "Crazy Wisdom is swim- mingly cozy - earthy. With the implied haze of incense in the air, even the rare shriek of steaming milk for a cappuccino sounds muted and mellow," Greiner said. "The tearoom offers artists a venue ripe for storytelling with a snug audi- ence, such as one might remem- ber from their elementary school librarian." With such a diverse and com- forting environment, Crazy Wisdom rests as one of the land- marks of true Ann Arbor culture. It's more than just a bookstore or teahouse; it's a community space used by yogis, massage thera- pists, psychics, artists and even a local Alcoholics Anonymous group. It's an atmosphere direct- ly connected to the students of Ann Arbor and the growing organic-living craze conquering the country. Teachers of Color Job Fair Learn Meet Discover about the faculty, the variety of experiences students, and teaching and benefits of administrators positions teaching in an from Metro available in independent Detroit and independent school. 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