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--
COVER
--
CONTRIBUTORS
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LETTER
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PREVIEWS
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EPHEMERA
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MUSEUM
The Presidential Gifts Museum
Hany Darwish
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TRAVEL
Igalo Institute
Clare Davies
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ART MARKET
Are auction houses
moving onto gallery turf?
Antonia
Carver
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INFRASTRUCTURE
Finding the Third
Way
Jinoos
Taghizadeh
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CURITORIAL
The Shenzhen Biennale of Urbanism and
Architecture
Charlie
Koolhaas
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WORK IN PROGRESS
Kaelen
Wilson-Goldie
on Ziad Antar
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WORK IN PROGRESS
Dominic Eichler
on Shahryar Nashat
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PROFILE
Tom Morton
on Saâdane Afi f
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GLORY
Peace Descending
on the Chariot of War
Sharifa
Rhodes-Pitts
White Wash
Paths of
Glory
Sophia
Al-Maria
The Road to
Wellville
Achal
Prabhala
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Battles of Troy
Krassimir
Terziev
In the Beginning
There was Souffles
Issandr El
Amrani
The Fifth
Element
Gary Dauphin
ONE: Across America
Tex Jernigan
Ismail Yasin in the Nuthouse
Essam Zakaria
Blessed Nimbus Churning
Malak Helmy
Ornament and Argument
Z Pamela Karimi and
Michael C Vazquez
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MUSIC
Our Lady of Hizbullah
Elias Muhanna
Mingering Mike
Superstar
Sukhdev
Sandhu
Fugere
Haig Aivazian
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FILM
Bruce Hainley in
conversation with filmmaker William E
Jones
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BOOKS
Hadetu
Sayed Mahmoud
Hollow Land
Sreemati
Mitter
I'jaamm
Haig Aivazian
I Will Draw a Star on Vienna's
Forehead
fdz
Desiring Arabs
Eyad Houssami
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REVIEWS
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COOKING
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MONGOLIAN PHRASE BOOK
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AFTERTHOUGHT
1+1=3
Babak Radboy and Michael
C Vazquez
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The 5th Element
By Gary Dauphin

In 1382, glory descended
upon the young men of England's seminaries and theological
schools, alongside such novelties as mystery, sex, female,
and horror. Or rather, glorie descended, one of several new
words improvised by Oxford don John Wycliffe and his band
of translators for their controversial English-language
version of the Latin Bible. The word's first appearance is
in Genesis, in the story of Joseph. The best-loved son of
Jacob, son of Abraham, and owner of the famed coat of many
colors, Joseph is sold to a passing caravan by his envious
brothers, but despite years of exile, slavery,
imprisonment, and even sexual harassment, his gift for
interpreting Pharaoh's dreams eventually lands him a plum
posting in charge of Egypt's royal granary. Later, when
Joseph encounters his brethren, now starving-it is a time
of famine, just as he predicted-he instructs them to take
word home to their father:
Lo! youre iyen, and the iyen of my brother Beniamyn seen,
that my mouth spekith to you; telle ye to my fadir al my
glorie, and alle thingis whiche ye sien in Egipt; haste ye,
and brynge ye hym to me. [Genesis 45: 12-13]
Jacob comes to Egypt to see Joseph's unlikely success for
himself, and brings the Israelites with him. (This move
would not go entirely well for the Jews, but that's another
story.) In Genesis glorie attends to the crosser of
borders, the exile. It belongs to the immigrant, with his
neatly tended warehouse of wheat.
Wycliffe's translation was undertaken in the chaotic
aftermath of the Black Death, a time of epic realignment,
from which new classes, new nations, and new literatures
would spring. It was composed at exactly the same moment as
The Canterbury Tales, and if the new translation was
dedicated to anyone, it was less the Father, Son, or Holy
Ghost than the tailors, farmers, and millers whose
entitlement, piety, and licentiousness Geoffrey Chaucer
immortalized in his own vernacular text. (Wycliffe's
critics thought as much, bemoaning how "the jewel of the
clergy has become the toy of the laity.") Where the Roman
Tacitus had celebrated the war song of the rebel
Boudicca-"On this spot we must either conquer, or die with
glory!"-and the authors of the medieval Annals of Wales
attributed the victories of sixth-century Celts to a
luminous king called Arthur, the translators of the
Wycliffe Bible discerned a different majesty, stolid yet
popular, the glory of those who survived when twenty
million died.
What Wycliffe's group called glorie had appeared in the
Latin Bible as gloria. But the Latin Bible was itself the
work of translators, and their gloria sat perched atop
still older words in other languages. Doxa, for one,
scattered throughout the original Greek version of the
Gospels. The word had signified simple "opinion" or
"belief," but the Jewish scholars in Alexandria who
translated the Hebrew scriptures into Greek in the first
centuries BCE chose to render ha-kavod, Joseph's glory, as
doxa. The coinage lent doxa an air of splendor, as well as
a kabbalistic register of prayerful submission. ("May my
soul be like dust to all," asks the daily Jewish prayer,
dust and soul alike submitting to wind.) Glory is thus
connected at the root not only to notions like paradox
(refusing to submit to common sense) or orthodoxy
(reflexively submitting to same) but also to a heterodox
undercurrent in which divinity and mundanity are understood
as contiguous. This is a thing-like glory, at best
distantly related to a Wycliffe coinage like mystery. It is
actually a form of anti-mystery: startling and immediate,
like the stench of a family rotting in a plague-ridden
cottage, or a sudden flash of gold.
Some mainline Catholic theologians of the same era saw
glory in somewhat related terms, speaking of a gloria
materialis. This was as an objective, etheric conductor, a
class of matter across which the affirmed and exalted fact
of God could be transmitted to the baser levels with all
the force of a slap in the face. Gloria materialis was like
a fifth element connecting earth, fire, water, and air to
God. It was the iridescent fingerprint of the Creator on
his creation, a holy residue that, like an oiled wick,
could connect the flammable hearts of men to the spark of
the divine. A few centuries later the first chemists would
theorize another fifth element, phlogiston, an invisible
substance thought to bind the other four in combustible
configurations; gloria materialis could be thought of as a
theological phlogiston. This kind of glory evoked the
properties of circuits and currents in the pre-electrical
age. It could suddenly render one speechless, the
proverbial bolt from the blue. One could plug into this
circuit willingly, or one could find oneself turned
abruptly into its passive conductor, filled against one's
will by the grandeur of God. Away from the Church of Rome
Calvin imagined something similar and called it grace, a
downward pressure from heaven that could force an unwilling
man to bend the knee. It was through grace that even the
lowliest might find themselves saved.
Wycliffe's sense of a middling, almost humble glorie would
lose its focus as later generations lost sight of the
apocalypse that had engendered both them and it. Glory has
come to accommodate a much wider world of meanings. Today
we speak of glory in relation to winning seasons,
paradigm-shifting technologies, roadside conversions, early
adopters, sublime panoramic vistas (both natural and
reproduced), and first brushes with abiding, transforming
loves. And glory has become a channel for other, darker
energies. Milton wrote in Paradise Lost of Lucifer's doomed
aspiration "to set himself in Glory above his Peers," and
we moderns feel the pang of deep, underlying sympathy. The
louche terrorist Zero in Robert Louis Stevenson's 1885
novel The Dynamiter quipped of his predilection for blowing
things up, "Mine is an anonymous, infernal glory. By
infamous means, I work towards my bright purpose." And lo,
across much of the English-speaking world, an opening in
the partition between two bathroom stalls in a men's room
becomes a glory hole. Dictionaries variously define the
glory hole as "a drawer or place where things are heaped
together in a disorderly manner," as an all-male space
below decks on a ship, as "an opening in the wall of a
glass furnace, exposing the brilliant white light of the
interior." Perhaps the term's coiners were also thinking of
the Latin diminutive gloriola-gloriole in English-which
over the years has become a near synonym of halo. The same
bright circlet now encloses the head of saint, sinner, and
martyr without prejudice or distinction, an opening in the
fabric of the world through which they transmit anonymously
and alone to another plane. All of it is glory.
I came of age during the 1970s and 80s in Cambria Heights,
Queens, a quiet, quasi-suburban neighborhood of tree-lined
streets on the extreme eastern edge of New York City. Our
zip code growing up was 11411, a numerologically suggestive
palindrome-four ones? One four? It could have easily been
notation for a drum machine, the encryption of a rhyme. My
family had come to the US in the mid-60s, fleeing the
island of Haiti and the dictatorship of François "Papa
Doc" Duvalier. Cambria Heights and its environs made tidy
safe houses for their aspirations, as well as for those of
tens of thousands of equally mobile African-American
neighbors. My parents had no intention of staying-no
Haitian tyrant had ever held on to power for more than a
few years, and they presumed they would soon go back home.
But they were grateful to America. Back in Haiti my mother
had been pregnant twice, but those "back there" pregnancies
had produced stillborn twins (fraternal; one boy, one girl)
and a weak, premature daughter, doomed to an infant's
burial. I was told the story of my dead siblings as soon as
I was able to hear it. The moral I came away with was that
I was not the firstborn; I was simply the first to survive.
Sometimes I wondered whether they resented me the good
fortune of my birth in exile, if they wished Duvalier had
made himself dictator sooner.
The then-defining traits of New York City in the popular
imagination-subways, graffiti, blight, crime-were in the
main hard to come by in our neighborhood. Public transit
started running out of steam long before it got to us, the
terminal stops of the subway system transferring bedroom
commuters onto weak sister buses several miles to our west
in Jamaica, and Queens's sketchier nabes were highly
specific and concentrated zones whose outlandishness only
underscored their anomaly. Queensbridge Houses may have
been the largest, most direly expansive public housing
project in the United States, but it sat remote on the
borough's Manhattan-facing edge like a distant stand of
foothills abutting a rarefied, skyscrapered promised land.
Similarly, for most of my youth the suffering and violence
in Queens's worst precinct-the appropriately nicknamed
Southside-was experienced largely through newspaper
headlines, rhymes, and television news, though it was
merely a long bicycle ride away from the major landmarks of
my adolescence. From the mid-80s through the mid-90s,
Southside was ground zero of Queens's crack epidemic;
Curtis Jackson, aka 50 Cent, twenty-first century hip hop's
biggest-selling robber baron, grew up there. Long before
the entire world knew the trivia of 50 Cent's comic-book
origin-shot five times while dealing drugs in Southside! In
the face!-it was well established that a kid from Cambria
Heights or Saint Albans would have to be crazy to ride his
bike out there. It would get tooken, as the West Indians
liked to say.
Our part of Queens was as far away from the urban centers
of Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx as it was possible to
live and still consider oneself a legit New Yorker. Most of
its residents had fled the big, bad core, but they had not
run so far that it was unable to exert a powerful hold on
the imaginations of their sons. We idolized and feared what
we shorthanded as "The City," fretted that our distance had
diminished us, made us soft. We tested ourselves against
The City's hazards at the border when we could, but mostly
we carried traces of it into our homes surreptitiously, for
study. The years of my growing up saw the birth of hip hop
in the United States, and New York is the genre's Garden of
Eden, but Queens has always played the role of stepchild in
these histories. (Even bucolic Staten Island would
eventually be redeemed by the esoteric exploits of the Wu
Tang Clan.) My part of Queens played an honorable role in
80s hip hop-I can claim to have seen local heroes Run-DMC
at more than one block party before they were famous-but
there was always a sense that my local heroes were tainted
or limited by the underlying good nature of their origins.
Even in the 80s you had the feeling that somewhere in The
City, likely in Manhattan, Brooklyn, or the Bronx, there
existed a more powerful musical live wire, whose voltages
and amplitudes ran differently than ours. The great MCs of
Eastern Queens and Western Long Island-Tribe Called Quest,
Public Enemy-made epic claims on our attention, but they
tended toward the formal or political, their imprecations
and choruses not quite the soundtrack to an anxious walk
down an unexpectedly darkened alley. Although they would
have their moment, we always had a feeling that they'd been
born to be eclipsed by hard-cases from the West, even if
the West was 50's Southside or Mobb Deep's
Queensbridge.
At eleven or twelve my friends and I were simply too young
to get on a train and witness such things for ourselves.
But we had been able to intuit their existence through the
music and chatter that emanated from radio towers atop the
Empire State Building, maybe the World Trade Center. During
the day New York was a fairly standard American radio town,
but on Fridays and Saturdays the airwaves would undergo
startling transformations. On weekends I would stay up way,
way past my bedtime, alone with a primitive radio cassette
recorder, obsessively listening to, taping, and annotating
live hip hop shows broadcasting from clubs in The City. It
was painstaking work. Masturbatory. I retreated to my room
to commune with the music the same way I might retreat with
pornography, locking the door and projecting myself into
scenarios and situations that were beyond my years and ken.
Long before I had any real notion of sex or dating or manly
peacockery and expression, I understood that the clubs in
The City were playing fields where all of the above and
more took place. When the DJ would cut the noise of a crowd
into the mix, I pictured myself in the hot, darkened room,
lending my voice to the mass, feeding out along wires to
the radio towers and into the world, into my bedroom, the
circuit complete.
Friday to Saturday, week to week, the mixes changed very
little; whole months or seasons might be marked by songs
that would appear in different locations in the mix on a
given night, in different versions. But when something new
appeared in the mix, it was like accidentally stumbling
across the third rail. It was magic, a sudden and
irrevocable shift in the fabric of the cosmos. I remember
being disquieted by the regularity with which what I had
believed to be the Greatest Record Ever could be eclipsed
by another. How could such things be? Didn't that mean that
the thing I had loved just a few moments earlier was
somehow untrue, unworthy? And didn't that mean that the
thing I was loving now was also destined to disappear?
In addition to confounding me, a new, hottish song also
immediately sent me into a kind of informational panic. The
DJs didn't tell you what they were playing-it was a club
mix, after all-so if you couldn't intuit who the artist was
or make out the lyric to a refrain, you would have to
ferret the data out somehow during daytime hours. On my
particular block lived two older boys with hobbyist DJ
tendencies: Eddie, who played the good-natured, tough-guy
protector to the younger boys, and Pete, who was far and
away the biggest asshole in a five-block radius. Pete was a
blond, blue-eyed kid-his parents were refusenik hold-outs
from the 50s and 60s, when Cambria Heights had been an
Irish and Italian neighborhood-who had survived and
prospered by living out a highly specific version of black
maleness with an exactitude and rigor that bordered on the
Japanese, though it was all thuggery and bullying. Pete had
more sneakers and Kangol hats than anyone we knew and was
by far a better and more knowledgeable DJ than Eddie, but
consulting him was always a last resort. It brought
risks-of ridicule, mostly, though also cartoonish physical
assaults involving wedgies and Indian burns. Even his
eventual redemption was lifted from a certain colored set
of pages. Pete converted to a strain of Sunni Islam popular
with African Americans. He lives on the same block to this
day, holy and sanctified, his mother and the kids from the
old neighborhood the only people allowed to refer to him by
his Christian name.
In any case, at a certain point on Friday and Saturday
nights I invariably found myself without guides. There were
two mixes each weekend night, an 11pm to 2am hip hop mix
and a 2am to 4am house mix, and I would listen to both,
cataloguing and recording songs. But in the dead of night,
when the house music started, I had nowhere to turn. In the
aftermath of disco, most dance music had become associated
in our young minds with homosexuals, and neither Eddie nor
Pete had much truck with the gays. I would sit in the dark,
unnerved and unmanned by the keenness of my interest. I
feasted on the orchestral flourishes of the house music
then in vogue, the gospel-powered wails of wronged and
hopeful black women. It was a vicious cycle: I knew I would
never be as tough as Eddie (forget Pete or the kids who
lived in The City), so I felt a kind of ecstatic release
from the pressure of manly expectation when 4/4 beats and
outsized vocals issued out of my radio. But this in turn
only further undermined my claim on the 11pm-to-2am slot. I
worried that someday I would have to make a choice between
mixes, and it seemed unfair, rigged even, a choice between
two forms of failure.
Still, the house mix was too compelling to turn away from.
I was fascinated by math as a kid, and I would often try to
graph the mixes on quadrille paper, assigning admittedly
arbitrary values and lines and algebraic expressions to
beats, vocal lines, crescendos, and fades. This work was
easier with the already schematic dance music, and I would
often fantasize about working backwards from a graph and
creating a song from it. The pictures always struck me as
beautiful, futuristic, graffiti-like, and I wondered what
the graph of the Greatest Record Ever might look like. I
understood from my readings in physics (another interest)
that scientists were on a quest to find a grand unified
theory that could explain and encompass everything, and I
imagined that such a thing must exist for music, too, a
graph of the perfect, hidden beat. This notion seemed to
solve the problem of the Greatest Song Ever, as whatever
song I loved at any moment could be understood to be an
aspect or piece of the Perfect Song, with some lines and
equations omitted or mathematically transformed. The next
Greatest Song Ever didn't erase or eclipse the previous
one; they were all the same. The upshot, of course, was
that I might have to keep listening, cataloguing, and
graphing forever. Saturdays and Sundays I would lay in bed
well past noon, more haggard than any child of relative
quiet and privilege should have been.
As my radio scanned the ether for signs of newness, I was
not so much Joseph discerning the true shape of Pharaoh's
dream as Noah, building and collecting, hedging my bets
against some gathering storm. (My parents were exiles after
all; they had been chased across the sea.) I didn't know
what I was making, to be honest, but I knew that this
unknown thing's construction entailed an awful amount of
work. I was going to need help, tools-better tools than pen
and graph paper and cassette recorder. My parents had been
loath to buy me an Atari. They worried it would come
between me and my studies, they said. So I talked them into
buying me an expensive personal computer by telling them
that it would help with my studies.
I eventually settled on a black-and-silver machine made by
Texas Instruments. It was a terrible choice, really, doomed
from the start; the TI was introduced in the early 80s,
only to be quickly eclipsed by Commodore 64s, IBMs, and
Apples. Its one noteworthy feature was that it came with a
then-impressive speech-synthesizing peripheral, a
side-benefit of TI's only successful line of consumer
electronics: the Speak and Spell talking vocabulary tutor.
On more than one occasion I stayed up until dawn, playing
the speech-synthesizer against the radio, making the
computer talk to me, recite lyrics in various electronic
voices and accents. Listening for an echo. I didn't know it
at the time, but Texas Instruments had gotten its start in
much the same way as a WWII-era maker of seismological
devices, using reflected sound to pinpoint buried petroleum
fields and the occasional silent-running German submarine.
Giant pistons or explosive devices would beat against the
curve of the earth as if it were an eardrum, seismic waves
carrying back echoes of pharaonic riches. Like Joseph after
all.
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