` blogchat horizontal rule

now you can look stylish and support the snowdeal.org at the same time. check out our schwag!

Pick up Moby Dick and open it up to page one. It says, "Call me Ishmael." Call whom Ishmael? Call Melville Ishmael? No. Call Ishmael Ishmael. Melville has created a fictional character named Ishmael. As you read the book you learn about Ishmael, about his life, about his beliefs and desires, his acts and attitudes. You learn a lot more about Ishmael then Melville ever explicitly tells you. Some of it you can read in by implication. Some of it you can read in by extrapolation. But beyond the limits of such extrapolation fictional worlds are simply indeterminate.

The Self as a Center of Narrative Gravity







wired / slashdot / tomalak / techdirt / bblog / webvoice / news.com / dotcomscoop / premium blend / techblog / the register /

nyt technology / salon technology / ananova / msnbc / cs monitor / economist technology / silicon prairie / siliconvalley.com / corante /

mediachannel / ojr / editor and publisher /

hbs / marketing profs / business 2.0 / red herring / fast company / darwin /

a & l daily / nyt magazine / economist / reason / edge / ny review of books /


valid xhtml 1.0 ?

Powered by Blogger Pro™ Independents Day

This site designed by
Eric C. Snowdeal III .
© 2000-2001