Archive for June, 2025

An offer: cufflinks

June 30, 2025

A small thing that’s turned up among the thousands of objects I need to abandon so that I can move, eventually, to an assisted care facility: a small circular leather box (under 3 inches diameter) with a collection of cufflinks in it. Lovely cufflinks, several sterling silver (including a tiny abacus that works), several with semi-precious stones, all from a long-ago life with my man Jacques. But I haven’t been able to deal with cufflinks for decades, so it’s time to find someone who would actually cherish this collection (the silver needs polishing).

The box is small enough to be not much trouble to mail (within the US) — I could get my grandchild Opal to do this —  though if you could pick it up in Palo Alto that would be even better. It would please me, and honor J’s memory, to send it to a good home.

Send requests by e-mail to: arnold dot zwicky at-sign gmail dot com

 

The city treasurer

June 29, 2025

One little note from today’s San Francisco Pride Parade, where all manner of things passed by, including a great many politicians — most of them just showing their support for some slice of their voting public, though (since this is San Francisco and the occasion is one of queer celebration) some of them will be actual LGBT+-folk.

Which brings me to the long-time city treasurer of San Francisco, José Cisneros. Now, the city treasurer serves as the city’s banker and chief investment officer, and manages all tax and revenue collection for San Francisco. It’s hard to imagine a less frivolous, more earnest or more weightily responsible position. But, since this is San Francisco, it should elicit no surprise that the city treasurer is not only Latino (as you will gather from his name; but then the senior senator from California, Alex Padilla, is Latino) but also gay.

But he holds a weightily responsible, banker’s position. And has the requisite education and business background to qualify for it. And, in fact he absolutely looks the part of the city treasurer of a major US city; he could have been supplied from central casting:


His official portrait, which cries out: rock-solid dependable, and approachable too; of course we will trust him to handle our civic monies

This pleases me. We are everywhere, in all walks of life, presenting ourselves in any number of ways. And actively working for the good of the community, as JC does.

My days of marching in pride parades are long past; now I watch them on tv. But it’s definitely a day for standing up and standing out, so I wore my black GAY AS FUCK tank top. Happy Pride.

 

Work

June 29, 2025

6/29, penultimate June, and 🏳️‍🌈 🏳️‍⚧️ the day of the 2025 San Francisco Pride Parade (the 55th, theme: Queer Joy is Resistance), which I’ll be watching in another window while I’m working on posting, with breaks to assemble more of the thousands of objects I need to dispose of to move to assisted living months down the line; endless puzzlements, some of which I’ll soon be posting about. A move that serves as segue to the topic of work, thanks to this 6/26 note on Facebook from Heidi Harley, with my response:

— HH: the move will be a relief and potentially a joy, depending on the other residents and the nature of the place …

— AZ > HH: I’m actually doing just fine at home, with all sorts of workarounds, plus a helper / caregiver a couple times a week. But everyone’s worried about what will happen if I need intensive medical care. I’m determined to continue my writing, which I view as a profession and a calling (as you know).

An additional note: writing is real work — takes intense concentration, long stretches of rewriting and editing to make it better, and so on — but like many kinds of real work, it can be deeply satisfying, a source of genuine pleasure.

And from that I’m taken to the Reading (PA) Eagle newspaper (afternoon and Sunday), where I started my first real job (initially as a copyboy), beginning in June 1958, when I was 17; I was soon shifted to the editorial staff as a floater (I’ll explain), and worked full-time for three summers (and part-time during university breaks) while I went to Princeton. It was a dream job, combining experience with all kinds of writing; learning to work on one thing after another, all relentlessly on deadline; working with a huge cast of characters, of many different natures; and gaining detailed knowledge of the way the world works — gritty stuff, scary stuff, fascinating stuff, and uplifting stuff, all gemischt.

Some recollections of my Eagle days will then lead to Studs Terkel (who died in 2008) and to Calvin Trillin (who’s still alive, at age 89).

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The chronicler of lives

June 28, 2025

From  6/19 on Facebook, an exchange between Aaron Broadwell and me (somewhat expanded in this version):

— AB > AZ: Arnold, I wonder if you knew Miriam Petruck, who died about two months ago. [with the link below:]

Linguist List 36.1873, 6/17/25, “In Memoriam Miriam R.L. Petruck (1952-2025)”: by Hans C. Boas, dated 6/14/25

[beginning:] Dr. Petruck was born April 11, 1952. She received her B.A. in Linguistics from Stony Brook University in New York in 1972 and her M.A. in Linguistics from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1976. In 1986, she received her Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of California, Berkeley, with Prof. Charles J. Fillmore as the head of her dissertation committee. Her dissertation on Hebrew body-part metaphors combined two of her lifelong interests, the scientific study of the Hebrew language and Cognitive Linguistics. Her dissertation was the first one to apply Frame Semantics to linguistic analysis. She became involved in the major research projects which Prof. Fillmore and his colleague Prof. Paul Kay undertook in the 1990s, developing the twin theories of Frame Semantics and Construction Grammar. She participated in the discussions leading to the creation of the FrameNet project (the practical implementation of Frame Semantics) in 1997, helping to define frames and to annotate some of the data in the FrameNet database.

For the rest of her life, she continued to publish and speak about both theories (particularly about Frame Semantics and its application to NLP), at conferences and seminars around the world.

— AZ > AB: I did indeed. Through my regular association with the Berkeley Linguistics Society in the old days. The death notice by Hans Boas on Linguist List focused on her position as a kind of international ambassador for FrameNet.

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The mortal agony of Saint Sebastian

June 27, 2025

Coming up on my Pinterest mail several times recently, this powerful sculpture (with no identification beyond its mislabeling as a piece of classical sculpture), clearly of Saint Sebastian (in some public place; I’ve deleted a trash can in the background), tied to a figurative tree, mortally wounded by arrows, his body contorted in unbearable pain, writhing in the deepest agony, with no trace of homoerotic ecstasy:


(#1) Not a piece of classical sculpture, since clearly not from ancient Greek or Roman times; not a sculpture on a classical theme, since Christian martyrdom is not a theme of ancient statuary; not even a sculpture in a classical style, given its sinewy modernist roughness; classical in spirit only in its capturing the virtually nude male body in bronze

Google Images told me instantly that this remarkable figure is Saint Sebastian, a large bronze sculpture (from 2008) by Ricardo Motilla (born 1951 in San Luís Potosí, Mexico), located at the entrance to the Museo de Arte e Historia de Guanajuato (the Art and History Museum of Guanajuato), in the city of León in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato.

Now, some brief remarks about the city of León (a place I suspect few of my readers have ever heard of, so you’re probably wondering how it could have a serious art and history museum). Then I’ll counterpose the terrible agony of Motilla’s StS to the general run of depictions of the saint, which are heavily weighted towards the ecstatic-homoerotic; in particular, the Motilla is at the opposite end of the StS brutality scale from the many depictions by Pierre et Gilles, all of them agony-free.

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Book offer: scholarly grammars of English

June 25, 2025

These can go to the Friends of the Palo Alto Library, but it occurs to me that among my friends and colleagues (I will also post this offer to Stanford Linguistics) there might be someone who would like a full set of one or more of these great scholarly grammars of English:

(paperback) Jespersen, Modern English Grammar (7 volumes), plus The Philosophy of Grammar

(hardback) Kruisinga, Handbook of Present-Day English (5 volumes)

(hardback) Poutsma, A Grammar of Late Modern English (4 volumes)

I don’t have the resources to mail stuff, so you have to be able to pick things up at my Palo Alto house (if you don’t live too far away, I have helpful family members who could deliver).

Arnold (there are other, less scholarly, offers to follow)

(inquiries to: arnold dot zwicky at-sign gmail dot com)

 

 

Away from my desk

June 25, 2025

Since my last posting — “I am the rose for Sharon”, on 6/22 — I’ve been taken up by (a) the usual self-care and household care, but managed without a helper / caregiver (my caregiver J was the last one I had, and he was last here on 6/5), and (b) extraordinary amounts of extra labor, as I begin months of clearing out this condo preparatory to being moved to a much smaller assisted care facility (this work proceeds very slowly because of my seriously disabled hands and my inability to deal with stuff on the floor). There’s been no time to write postings (though I owe completions for a slew of them, and continue to pick up new topics every day).

My apologies; I am unstrung.

 

I am the rose for Sharon

June 22, 2025

Yesterday, a brief and multiply allusive birthday poem for my friend Sharon (“A rose for Sharon”, on this blog here), along with the birthday gift to her of a big spathiphyllum plant, which should soon send up some of its sexy flowers. Various associations floated in my mind along with the plants and their symbolic eroticism.

Molly Bloom and her soliloquy of yes, but directed to a woman. And, overwhelmingly, the singer of the Song of Solomon 2:1, a woman who declares that she is (figuratively) the rose of Sharon and the lily of the valleys and goes on into (heterosexual) erotic verse from the woman’s point of view (which can of course be repurposed as directed to a woman), ending with a surprising celebration of spring (in places where winter is the rainy season), suggesting a springtime of her body as well as the season:

My beloved spake, and said unto me,
Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away.
For lo, the winter is past,
The rain is over and gone.

And from that I’m taken to shapenote music and to factual questions about the plant the rose of Sharon and about Sharon the place from which this plant (and the Sharons of this world) got its name.

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A rose for Sharon

June 21, 2025

An occasional poem (in free verse) for my friend Sharon on her recent birthday, wrapped up in the calendar, the female body, and plants and their sexual symbolisms, with photos. The poem first, then remarks on its form, then a bit of background information.

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Blend and chill, witches will

June 20, 2025

The cold hags of summer cackle over a cauldron of fresh vegetables in this Roz Chast cartoon from the 6/23/25 New Yorker:


The Three Chilled Sisters crush and grind, crush and grind

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