DOCUMENTARY TRAILER: “The United States of Amnesia” / Gore Vidal

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=INW6i6K1NmQ
Watch clips from the documentary below:

INTERVIEW: “Gore Vidal on The Media” / Gore Vidal’s America / Part 5 of 7

INTERVIEW: “Gore Vidal on the Democrats and Religion” / Gore Vidal’s America / Part 4 of 7

INTERVIEW: “Gore Vidal on Liberty” / Gore Vidal’s America / Part 3 of 7

INTERVIEW: “Gore Vidal on ‘The Emperor'” / Gore Vidal’s America / Part 2 of 7

INTERVIEW: “Gore Vidal on the Cold War” / Gore Vidal’s America / Part 1 of 7

LITERARY NEUROSCIENCE: Corrie Goldman / “This is your Brain on Jane Austen, and Stanford Researchers are Taking Notes”

In an innovative interdisciplinary study, neurobiological experts, radiologists and humanities scholars are working together to explore the relationship between reading, attention and distraction – by reading Jane Austen.

Surprising preliminary results reveal a dramatic and unexpected increase in blood flow to regions of the brain beyond those responsible for “executive function,” areas which would normally be associated with paying close attention to a task, such as reading, said Natalie Phillips, the literary scholar leading the project.

[…]

Pioneering in a number of respects, her research is “one of the first fMRI experiments to study how our brains respond to literature,” Phillips said, as well as the first to consider “how cognition is shaped not just by what we read, but how we read it.”

Critical reading of humanities-oriented texts is recognized for fostering analytical thought, but if such results hold across subjects, Phillips said it would suggest “it’s not only what we read – but thinking rigorously about it that’s of value, and that literary study provides a truly valuable exercise of people’s brains.”

Read more . . .

BOOK EXCERPT: Craig Brown / “J.D. Salinger’s Letter To Ernest Hemingway”

The following is an excerpt from “Hello Goodbye Hello” [Simon & Schuster,26.95]:

J.D. Salinger seeks out Ernest Hemingway The Ritz Hotel, 15 place Vendôme, Paris Late August 1944.

The twenty-five-year-old Jerry Salinger is experiencing a terrible war. Of the 3,080 men of the 12th US Infantry who disembarked with him at Normandy on D-Day, only a third are still alive.

His regiment is the first to enter Paris. They are mobbed by happy crowds. Salinger’s job as an officer in the Counter-Intelligence Corps entails weeding out and interrogating Nazi collaborators. As they go through Paris, he and a fellow officer arrest a collaborator, but a crowd wrests their prisoner away and beats him to death.

Salinger has heard that Ernest Hemingway is in town. A writer himself, with a growing reputation for his short stories, he is determined to seek out America’s most famous living novelist. He feels sure he will find him at the Ritz, so he drives the jeep there. Sure enough, Hemingway is installed in the small bar, already bragging that he alone liberated Paris in general and the Ritz in particular.

Continue reading . . .