There’s no place like home
I admit it; I’m a sucker for place-based art.
Local maps aren’t bad either.
With liberty and open access for all
Have you ever heard of open access? It means “even people who aren’t in college should be able to read the results of our country’s best researchers and thinkers.” Well, not literally. But that’s the general idea.
Think about the parents of a child with a rare disease, who want to read the latest medical journal articles. Or a small-town journalist struggling to understand the implications of a local enviornmental problem. Or even an amateur enthusiast who wants to see the research published by this year’s Nobel prize winners.
If you’re not a college student or professor, you’re largely left out in the cold when it comes to vast amounts of useful information (much of which we as taxpayers have helped to fund). For example, my own alma mater will not allow alumni to purchase access to their library databases for any price. (For $200/year, you can sit in the library and look at a printed book, but millions of journal articles and other electronic resources are forbidden.)
Even if you are in college, costs can be an issue. I remember being shocked that a “bulkpack” of readings for one of my classes cost $70 — and that was years ago. For students who are on scholarship and/or working their way through school, expensive coursebooks and readings are a significant barrier to getting the class materials they need, promptly and effectively.
The good news is that some passionate and visionary people have been working to change the current, locked-down system. Go read one of them now.
Madeleine L’Engle has died
The Wikipedia biography gives a nice overview.
One of the things that stands out for me about A Wrinkle in Time was its unashamed, unusually explicit depiction of love. It was one of the first books I read in which a mother’s love for her husband was portrayed as passionate. Wow! The idea that Mrs. Murry could miss her husband as more than just a co-parent. There was also Meg’s love for Charles Wallace, a sibling love that wasn’t just described as powerful but actually had the power to change the course of events. And Calvin’s love for Meg, the seeds of which are taken seriously even amidst the joking affection of their interactions.
One of the obituaries I read said that L’Engle disliked being referred to as a “children’s author.” For me, what was revolutionary about her was the dignity with which she wrote about children’s lives. Children in her books were not short adults or cutesy role models. They were independent actors.
Adults too, flawed as they often were. I have given her non-fiction work Two-Part Invention: The Story of a Marriage as a wedding gift. Maybe an odd choice, given that the book deals with the death of L’Engle’s husband. But beginning with the title, it does a superb job of pushing one to think about the frightening grandeur and loving pain of committing yourself to another person.
Her papers are at Wheaton College.
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