478 Dorothea Lange Photographs Poignantly Document the Internment of the Japanese During WWII

Lange 1

“This is what we did. How did it hap­pen? How could we?” –Dorothea Lange

The idea sounds coun­ter­in­tu­itive giv­en the vio­lence we read about dai­ly, but it is per­haps pos­si­ble that human soci­eties are slow­ly out­grow­ing xeno­pho­bia and war, as Har­vard psy­chol­o­gist and lin­guist Steven Pinker has argued exten­sive­ly. It’s also pos­si­ble that Pinker’s view is an “arti­cle of faith” rather than fact. In any case, we can at least be heart­ened by one thing: If we do become bet­ter at learn­ing from the past than repeat­ing it, the pri­ma­ry doc­u­ments will not have dis­ap­peared into a mem­o­ry hole. The very same tech­nolo­gies that spread fear, big­otry, and dis­in­for­ma­tion across the globe also enable us to unearth humanity’s long his­to­ry of bad deci­sion-mak­ing and pre­serve the evi­dence in wide­ly-acces­si­ble online archives.

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One such archive, the Den­sho Dig­i­tal Repos­i­to­ry, con­tains “his­toric pho­tographs, doc­u­ments, news­pa­pers, let­ters and oth­er pri­ma­ry source mate­ri­als” from the his­to­ry of the Japan­ese in America—including, of course, a par­tic­u­lar­ly regret­table his­tor­i­cal episode, the intern­ment of Japan­ese Amer­i­cans dur­ing WWII, a grim polit­i­cal expe­di­ent that offers lessons today to those who choose to learn them. Promi­nent among the archives’ many doc­u­ments from the peri­od is the Dorothea Lange Col­lec­tion, almost 500 images tak­en by the famous pho­tog­ra­ph­er of “the many dif­fer­ent stages of mass removal and incar­cer­a­tion” of Japan­ese Amer­i­cans in Cal­i­for­nia. The pho­tographs (recent­ly high­light­ed on Kottke.org) fea­ture orig­i­nal cap­tions writ­ten by Lange that con­tex­tu­al­ize the sub­jects and some­times pro­vide their names and a few bio­graph­i­cal details.

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The lives of Japan­ese internees were in fact doc­u­ment­ed by not one, but two famous Amer­i­can pho­tog­ra­phers, Lange and Ansel Adams. How­ev­er, Adams—whose pho­to­graph­ic series we fea­tured in a pre­vi­ous post—gained access to an intern­ment camp in the foothills of the Sier­ra Nevadas on his own, through a friend­ship with the camp’s war­den. Lange, on the oth­er hand, snapped sev­er­al hun­dred pho­tographs while on offi­cial assign­ment with the War Relo­ca­tion Author­i­ty. In 1942, the gov­ern­ment hired her to doc­u­ment the removal and impris­on­ment of over 100,000 Japan­ese Amer­i­cans in camps across the state.

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Lange’s pho­tographs, writes Densho’s blog, have helped shape “the col­lec­tive mem­o­ry of Japan­ese Amer­i­can removal.” Despite the restric­tions placed on her by the authorities—Lange could not shoot images of barbed wire, bay­o­nets, or guard towers—“she man­aged to pro­duce a body of work that at once cap­tured the inhu­mane actions of the U.S. gov­ern­ment and the human­i­ty of the indi­vid­u­als being forced to leave their lives behind for the ‘crime’ of Japan­ese ances­try.”

Lange 13

Her pho­tographs are “seem­ing­ly unstaged and unlight­ed,” writes Dini­tia Smith in a New York Times review of Impound­ed, a book fea­tur­ing many of the close to 800 pho­tographs Lange took, most of which were only recent­ly dis­cov­ered at the Nation­al Archives, “where they had lain neglect­ed for a half-cen­tu­ry after hav­ing been impound­ed by the gov­ern­ment.” Best known for her pho­tos of Dust Bowl farm work­ers, Lange, writes schol­ar Megan Asa­ka at Den­sho, “was an odd choice, giv­en her left­ist pol­i­tics and strong sym­pa­thy for vic­tims of racial dis­crim­i­na­tion.” She was “appalled by the forced exile” and “con­fid­ed to a Quak­er pro­test­er that she was guilt strick­en to be work­ing for a fed­er­al gov­ern­ment that could treat its cit­i­zens so unjust­ly.” She took on the assign­ment “to accu­rate­ly record what the Japan­ese Amer­i­cans were under­go­ing,” but apart from “a few pho­tos that reached the pub­lic,” most of her work didn’t see the light of day for decades.

Lange 8

“What the mil­i­tary want­ed from her,” explains his­to­ri­an Lin­da Gor­don in a PBS doc­u­men­tary on Lange’s assign­ment, “was a set of pho­tographs to illus­trate that they weren’t per­se­cut­ing or tor­tur­ing these peo­ple who they evac­u­at­ed.” Gor­don, who co-edit­ed Impound­ed, notes in the book that the pho­tos “tell us that con­di­tions in the camps were much worse than most peo­ple think.” It’s hard not to be remind­ed of anoth­er, more har­row­ing, forced removal hap­pen­ing a con­ti­nent away as we see Lange’s images of Japan­ese Amer­i­can fam­i­lies forced to aban­don their homes and stores, fill out reg­is­tra­tion paper­work, gath­er their belong­ings in suit­cas­es, and board trains and bus­es en masse with num­bered tags around their necks.

Lange 10

What await­ed the internees at the camps were mil­i­tary-style bar­racks, libraries, rudi­men­ta­ry schools, and “tar-paper shacks where they endured bru­tal heat and bit­ter cold, filth, dust and open sew­ers,” writes Smith. Some internees were housed in for­mer horse stalls and many endured cav­i­ty search­es and oth­er humil­i­at­ing indig­ni­ties, as well as dai­ly fear and anx­i­ety about their even­tu­al fates. Lange’s pho­tographs, how­ev­er, “pow­er­ful­ly con­test the gov­ern­ment pro­pa­gan­da and hate­ful rhetoric aimed at vil­i­fy­ing Japan­ese Amer­i­cans,” writes Den­sho: “Often shot from a low angle, Lange places her sub­jects on a visu­al pedestal. She restores some dig­ni­ty in a moment when, many admit, they felt they had none.”

Lange 4

Unlike Ansel Adams’ fas­ci­nat­ing pho­tos, which are restrict­ed to the con­fines of one camp, Lange’s doc­u­ment the internees entire jour­ney from free­dom to impris­on­ment, as well as the respons­es of many Japan­ese Amer­i­cans to their new sta­tus as inter­nal ene­mies of the state. One shop own­er, “a Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia grad­u­ate of Japan­ese descent,” Lange not­ed, placed the sign you see above on his closed store­front.

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All of the pho­tographs in the Den­sho archive are now in the pub­lic domain and can be freely used for any pur­pose. Lange, I imag­ine, would hope they force us to reflect on the futile insan­i­ty of demo­niz­ing entire pop­u­la­tions and turn­ing on fel­low cit­i­zens in times of war, xeno­pho­bic fer­vor and polit­i­cal oppor­tunism.

Lange 9

via Kot­tke

Relat­ed Con­tent:

200 Ansel Adams Pho­tographs Expose the Rig­ors of Life in Japan­ese Intern­ment Camps Dur­ing WW II

Yale Launch­es an Archive of 170,000 Pho­tographs Doc­u­ment­ing the Great Depres­sion

1,000+ Haunt­ing & Beau­ti­ful Pho­tos of Native Amer­i­can Peo­ples, Shot by the Ethno­g­ra­ph­er Edward S. Cur­tis (Cir­ca 1905)

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC. Fol­low him at @jdmagness

10 Digital Editions of Surrealist Journals from Argentina, Chile & Spain (1928–67)

surrealist journals

Fans of mag­i­cal real­ism know that Latin Amer­i­can writ­ers seem to pos­sess a unique mas­tery of the tra­di­tion, and any­one who thinks of sur­re­al­ism in visu­al art will soon think of Sal­vador Dalí, who began and end­ed his dis­tinc­tive career in his native Spain. Why have Span­ish-speak­ing cul­tures proven so con­ducive to the kinds of cre­ativ­i­ty that bend real­i­ty just enough to make a deep and last­ing impact on their audi­ence? Those search­ing for answers would do well to look through the Autonomous Uni­ver­si­ty of Madrid’s dig­i­tal trove of Span­ish, Chilean, and Argen­tine sur­re­al­ist jour­nals from 1928–76.

Surrealism 2

They all appear as part of an inves­tiga­tive project whose name trans­lates to “Toward a Char­ac­ter­i­za­tion of His­pan­ic Sur­re­al­ism.” The archive includes, from Argenti­na:

From Chile:

And from Spain:

Surrealism 1

When you click on one of the mag­a­zines in the archive, the site will take you to a page with more infor­ma­tion describ­ing the mag­a­zine as well as plac­ing it in the prop­er his­tor­i­cal and cul­tur­al con­text of sur­re­al­is­m’s his­to­ry. (Non-Span­ish-speak­ers can get some trans­la­tion if they view the page with Google Chrome.) From there, you can click on an indi­vid­ual issue to read it.

Surrealism 3

As you flip through these records of an artis­ti­cal­ly fas­ci­nat­ing time in a series of places well suit­ed to it, you’ll get a sense of how much the dis­course var­ied even just with­in the realm of Span­ish-speak­ing sur­re­al­ists: some have a more play­ful tone while oth­ers have a more seri­ous one (though mix­ing the two did become some­thing of a sur­re­al­ist spe­cial­ty); some look out to the rest of the world while oth­ers look inward; and some come filled with strik­ing illus­tra­tions while oth­ers stick to the analy­sis of rel­e­vant ideas through text — and lots of it.

OC surrealist journals 3

Even though the most recent of these pub­li­ca­tions came off the press­es near­ly half a cen­tu­ry ago, any vis­i­tor to Spain, Argen­tine, or Chile, as well as oth­er coun­tries in the His­panophone world, will find they still have a cer­tain sur­re­al­is­tic sen­si­bil­i­ty to them. Long may they retain it.

via Mono­skop, an always inter­est­ing resource that you can fol­low on Twit­ter.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Exten­sive Archive of Avant-Garde & Mod­ernist Mag­a­zines (1890–1939) Now Avail­able Online

Restored Ver­sion of Un Chien Andalou: Luis Buñuel & Sal­vador Dalí’s Sur­re­al Film (1929)

David Lynch Presents the His­to­ry of Sur­re­al­ist Film (1987)

Sal­vador Dalí’s Avant-Garde Christ­mas Cards

Based in Seoul, Col­in Mar­shall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and style. He’s at work on a book about Los Ange­les, A Los Ange­les Primer, the video series The City in Cin­e­ma, the crowd­fund­ed jour­nal­ism project Where Is the City of the Future?, and the Los Ange­les Review of Books’ Korea Blog. Fol­low him on Twit­ter at @colinmarshall or on Face­book.

Mad Magazine’s Al Jaffee & Other Cartoonists Create Animations to End Distracted Driving


Mod­el Ts were the aver­age American’s car of choice in 1921, when car­toon­ist Al Jaf­fee was born.

The father of MAD Mag­a­zine’s fold-ins was but sev­en when the T’s suc­ces­sor, the Mod­el A, was intro­duced.

It would be a long time before such inno­va­tions as seat belts, baby seats, and airbags were intro­duced. These safe­ty mea­sures do a fine job of min­i­miz­ing human dam­age in motor vehi­cle acci­dents, but they can’t pre­vent the col­li­sions them­selves.

To rem­e­dy this, Ford, the com­pa­ny respon­si­ble for the Mod­el T and hun­dreds of motor vehi­cles since, recent­ly enlist­ed Jaf­fee and his fel­low car­toon­ists, MK Brown and Bill Plymp­ton, to edu­cate the pub­lic on the dan­gers of dis­tract­ed dri­ving. Turns out this pre­ventable scourge rivals intox­i­ca­tion and haz­ardous road con­di­tions as a lead­ing cause of acci­dents.

Jaffee’s take, ani­mat­ed by J.J. Sedel­maier, above, will nev­er be mis­tak­en for film­mak­er Wern­er Her­zog’s har­row­ing anti-tex­ting doc­u­men­tary PSA, From One Sec­ond to the Next, or even Jaffee’s own anti-drunk dri­ving fold-in from MAD’s March 1975 issue.

Instead, he offers a gen­tle, child-friend­ly metaphor in which an uncaged bird becomes a hav­oc-wreak­ing dis­trac­tion. (For­tu­nate­ly, everyone’s wear­ing his seat­belt, and the lit­tle boy is rid­ing in back, in com­pli­ance with CDC rec­om­men­da­tions.)


Nation­al Lam­poon alum, Brown, tip­toes clos­er to the true caus­es of dis­trac­tion, with the alien-themed seg­ment, above, also ani­mat­ed by Sedel­maier. If it seems like­li­er that the alien’s earth­ling wife might do her hen­peck­ing via text rather than actu­al call these days—well, some­times dra­mat­ic lib­er­ties are war­rant­ed to get the mes­sage across.


Unsur­pris­ing­ly, Plympton’s self-ani­mat­ed con­tri­bu­tion is the most graph­ic, a direct descen­dent of his fab­u­lous­ly grotesque car­toon primers 25 Ways To Quit Smok­ing and How To Kiss. Moral? Assum­ing you want to keep your teeth in your head, the veg­etable mat­ter wedged in between can wait ’til you reach your des­ti­na­tion.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Wern­er Herzog’s Eye-Open­ing New Film Reveals the Dan­gers of Tex­ting While Dri­ving

Al Jaf­fee, the Longest Work­ing Car­toon­ist in His­to­ry, Shows How He Invent­ed the Icon­ic “Folds-Ins” for Mad Mag­a­zine

Read­ing While Dri­ving, Seri­ous­ly?

Ayun Hal­l­i­day is an author, illus­tra­tor, and Chief Pri­ma­tol­o­gist of the East Vil­lage Inky. Her plan for avoid­ing acci­dents is to refrain from dri­ving when­ev­er pos­si­ble. Fol­low her @AyunHalliday

Learning How to Learn: The Most Popular MOOC of All Time

When MOOCs (Mas­sive Open Online Cours­es) first start­ed mak­ing head­lines in 2012, we read sto­ries about thou­sands of peo­ple enrolling in cours­es on Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence and Com­put­er Sci­ence. Since then, the MOOC providers have dou­bled down on pro­mot­ing tech­ni­cal and util­i­tar­i­an courses–courses that will get stu­dents jobs, and even­tu­al­ly make the MOOC providers mon­ey. Peruse this list of the 50 most pop­u­lar MOOCs of all time, and you’ll seen plen­ty of mar­ket-ori­ent­ed cours­es top­ping the list–e.g., #4) Intro­duc­tion to Finance #3) R Pro­gram­ming, and #2) Machine Learn­ing. But what’s the most pop­u­lar course? Some­thing not entire­ly career-focused. Some­thing not imme­di­ate­ly mon­e­ti­z­able. Some­thing that can ben­e­fit us all. Ladies and gen­tle­men, the #1 course, Learn­ing How to Learn: Pow­er­ful men­tal tools to help you mas­ter tough sub­jects.

Cre­at­ed by Bar­bara Oak­ley (Uni­ver­si­ty of Oak­land) and Ter­ry Sejnows­ki (the Salk Insti­tute), Learn­ing How to Learn uses neu­ro­science to fine-tune our abil­i­ty to learn. And the course is being offered again, start­ing today, through Cours­era. You can enroll here (the course is free) and read what ground the course will cov­er below.

This course gives you easy access to the invalu­able learn­ing tech­niques used by experts in art, music, lit­er­a­ture, math, sci­ence, sports, and many oth­er dis­ci­plines. We’ll learn about the how the brain uses two very dif­fer­ent learn­ing modes and how it encap­su­lates (“chunks”) infor­ma­tion. We’ll also cov­er illu­sions of learn­ing, mem­o­ry tech­niques, deal­ing with pro­cras­ti­na­tion, and best prac­tices shown by research to be most effec­tive in help­ing you mas­ter tough sub­jects. Using these approach­es, no mat­ter what your skill lev­els in top­ics you would like to mas­ter, you can change your think­ing and change your life. If you’re already an expert, this peep under the men­tal hood will give you ideas for: tur­bocharg­ing suc­cess­ful learn­ing, includ­ing counter-intu­itive test-tak­ing tips and insights that will help you make the best use of your time on home­work and prob­lem sets. If you’re strug­gling, you’ll see a struc­tured trea­sure trove of prac­ti­cal tech­niques that walk you through what you need to do to get on track. If you’ve ever want­ed to become bet­ter at any­thing, this course will help serve as your guide.

This course gives you easy access to the invalu­able learn­ing tech­niques used by experts in art, music, lit­er­a­ture, math, sci­ence, sports, and many oth­er dis­ci­plines. We’ll learn about the how the brain uses two very dif­fer­ent learn­ing modes and how it encap­su­lates (“chunks”) infor­ma­tion. We’ll also cov­er illu­sions of learn­ing, mem­o­ry tech­niques, deal­ing with pro­cras­ti­na­tion, and best prac­tices shown by research to be most effec­tive in help­ing you mas­ter tough sub­jects. Using these approach­es, no mat­ter what your skill lev­els in top­ics you would like to mas­ter, you can change your think­ing and change your life. If you’re already an expert, this peep under the men­tal hood will give you ideas for: tur­bocharg­ing suc­cess­ful learn­ing, includ­ing counter-intu­itive test-tak­ing tips and insights that will help you make the best use of your time on home­work and prob­lem sets. If you’re strug­gling, you’ll see a struc­tured trea­sure trove of prac­ti­cal tech­niques that walk you through what you need to do to get on track. If you’ve ever want­ed to become bet­ter at any­thing, this course will help serve as your guide.

To find reviews of Learn­ing How to Learn, vis­it Class Cen­tral. To keep tabs on new MOOCs, see our list of MOOCs from Great Uni­ver­si­ties.

If you would like to sign up for Open Culture’s free email newslet­ter, please find it here. It’s a great way to see our new posts, all bun­dled in one email, each day.

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site. It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal, Patre­on, and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

The Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter” Played by Musicians Around the World

There’s some­thing dark and apoc­a­lyp­tic about the Rolling Stones’ 1969 song, “Gimme Shel­ter”–from the lyrics (“Oh, a storm is threat’n­ing. My very life today. If I don’t get some shel­ter. Oh yeah, I’m gonna fade away”), to the grim cir­cum­stances sur­round­ing the record­ing of the track, released on the album Let It Bleed. A sense of dread runs through­out the Stones’ orig­i­nal song. Less so the ver­sion above, cre­at­ed by the mul­ti­me­dia project Play­ing for Change, which strives to cre­ate world peace through music. Record­ed back in 2011, this cov­er brings togeth­er artists from around the world: India, Italy, Jamaica, Brazil, Mali, Sier­ra Leone, Sene­gal, and the US. And it’s just one of 21 songs that appears on the DVD/CD com­bo, Songs Around the World.  Oth­er videos by Play­ing for Change can be found in the Relat­eds below.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Mick Jag­ger Tells the Sto­ry Behind ‘Gimme Shel­ter’ and Mer­ry Clayton’s Haunt­ing Back­ground Vocals

The Grate­ful Dead’s “Rip­ple” Played by Musi­cians Around the World

When “Stand By Me” Trav­els Around the World

8 Glorious Hours of Dylan Thomas Reading Poetry–His Own & Others’

“To choose what I should read tonight, I looked through sev­en­ty odd poems of mine, and found that many are odd indeed and that some may be poems,” said Dylan Thomas in a 1949 BBC broad­cast. “I decid­ed not to choose those that strike me, still, as pret­ty pecu­liar, but to stick to a few of the ones that do move a lit­tle way towards the state and des­ti­na­tion I imag­ine I intend­ed to be theirs when, in small rooms in Wales, arro­gant­ly and devot­ed­ly I began them.”

This intro­duc­tion to an evening’s read­ing on the radio sur­vives in Spo­ti­fy’s playlist “Read­ings from Dylan Thomas,” which col­lects eight hours of not just the poet read­ing his own work, but oth­ers’ as well. (If you don’t have Spo­ti­fy’s free soft­ware, you can down­load it here.) Though the hard-drink­ing, usu­al­ly impe­cu­nious Thomas died young in 1953, he man­aged to attain an impres­sive degree of fame dur­ing his life­time, espe­cial­ly by the stan­dards of poets. His fre­quent read­ing tours and radio gigs ulti­mate­ly made him some­thing of a “peo­ple’s poet” for Great Britain.

“My grand­fa­ther made 145 sep­a­rate engage­ments with the BBC,” says Thomas’ grand­daugh­ter Han­nah Ellis in the British Coun­cil video on Thomas and the BBC f0und here. “These includ­ed writ­ing scripts, read­ing poet­ry and short sto­ries, as well as act­ing. He also became a reg­u­lar on many pan­el dis­cus­sions, mak­ing him a well-known radio per­son­al­i­ty.” His ties with the radio world and resul­tant high pub­lic pro­file have kept his voice unusu­al­ly well-pre­served by com­par­i­son to those of his con­tem­po­raries: we can now hear him much more eas­i­ly than even his fans could at the height of his fame in the late 1940s.

“I’ve bored my wife to death for years by say­ing (among oth­er things that have also bored her to death) that when you lis­ten to poet­ry you should always be giv­en an idea of the ‘shape’ of the poem,” Thomas said in anoth­er BBC appear­ance. The 102 tracks of this Spo­ti­fy playlist include a few of those non-poet­ic speech­es, but only after a recita­tion of what we might call Thomas’ big hit, “Do Not Go Gen­tle Into That Good Night.” But as with the cat­a­log of any record­ing artist, it pays to spend more time among the deep cuts — even the poems Thomas him­self might have thought “odd indeed” — and these eight hours deliv­er plen­ty of them, each with a shape of its own.

This playlist will be added to our col­lec­tion, 1,000 Free Audio Books: Down­load Great Books for Free.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Dylan Thomas Recites ‘Do Not Go Gen­tle into That Good Night’ and Oth­er Poems

Dylan Thomas’ “Do Not Go Gen­tle Into That Good Night” Per­formed by John Cale (and Pro­duced by Bri­an Eno)

Hear Dylan Thomas Read Three Poems by W.H. Auden, Includ­ing “Sep­tem­ber 1, 1939”

Dylan Thomas Sketch­es a Car­i­ca­ture of a Drunk­en Dylan Thomas

Based in Seoul, Col­in Mar­shall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and style. He’s at work on a book about Los Ange­les, A Los Ange­les Primer, the video series The City in Cin­e­ma, the crowd­fund­ed jour­nal­ism project Where Is the City of the Future?, and the Los Ange­les Review of Books’ Korea Blog. Fol­low him on Twit­ter at @colinmarshall or on Face­book.

Can You Pass This Test Originally Given to 8th Graders Living in Kentucky in 1912?

bcschoolexam1912sm--1-

Can you spell “con­ceive”?

Of course you can! All it takes is a device with a built-in spelling app, an inno­va­tion of which no eighth grad­er in the far west­ern reach­es of blue­grass area Ken­tucky could have con­ceived back in 1912.

They were, how­ev­er, expect­ed to be able to name the waters though which an Eng­lish ves­sel would pass en route to Mani­la via the Suez Canal.

Can you?

While we’re at it, how much do you real­ly know about the human liv­er? Enough to locate it, iden­ti­fy its secre­tions, and dis­course on its size rel­a­tive to oth­er bod­i­ly glands?

If you answered yes, con­grat­u­la­tions. There’s a good chance you’d be pro­mot­ed to high school back in 1912. Not bad for a kid attend­ing a one-room school in rur­al Bul­lit Coun­ty.

And now for some extra cred­it, name the last bat­tles of the Civ­il War, the War of 1812, and the French and Indi­an War. Com­mand­ing offi­cers, too…

That’s the sort of mul­ti­part ques­tion that await­ed the eighth graders con­verg­ing on the Bul­lit Coun­ty cour­t­house for 1912’s com­mon exam, above. The very same cour­t­house in which the mod­ern day Bul­litt Coun­ty His­to­ry Muse­um is locat­ed. A civic-mind­ed indi­vid­ual donat­ed a copy of the test to this insti­tu­tion, and the staff put it online, think­ing it might be fun for lat­ter-day spec­i­mens like you and me to see how we mea­sure up.

So—just for fun—try typ­ing the phrase “com­mand­ing offi­cer last bat­tle french & indi­an war” into your search engine of choice. For­get instant grat­i­fi­ca­tion. Embrace the anx­i­ety!

Com­mon wis­dom holds that stan­dard­ized tests are a lot hard­er than they used to be. But look­ing at the sort of stuff your aver­age eighth grad­er had to regur­gi­tate two years pri­or to the start of WW1, I’m not so sure…

Thank god the Inter­net was there to define “kalso­min­ing” for me. Even with the aid of a cal­cu­la­tor, math is not my strong suit. That said, I’m usu­al­ly good enough with words to get the nar­ra­tive gist of any sto­ry prob­lem.

Usu­al­ly.

I con­fess, I was so demor­al­ized by my igno­rance, I couldn’t have dreamed of attempt­ing to fig­ure out how much it would cost to “kalsomine” a 20 x 16 x 9 foot room, espe­cial­ly with a door and win­dow involved.

For­tu­nate­ly, the Bul­lit Coun­ty Genealog­i­cal Soci­ety has seen fit to pro­vide an online answer sheet, a dig­i­tal lux­u­ry that would have gob­s­macked their fore­bears.

SPOILER: $8.01. That’s the amount it would’ve cost to kalsomine your room at 1912 prices. (A steal, con­sid­er­ing that a quart of White Wash Pick­ling Water Based Stain will run you $12.37 a quart at a nation­al­ly known hard­ware super­store today.)

Go ahead, take that test.

If you quail at the prospect of far­ing poor­ly against a rur­al 1912 eighth grad­er, just imag­ine how well he or she would do, tele­port­ed to 2016, and forced to con­tend with such mys­ter­ies as cyber bul­ly­ing, gen­der pol­i­tics, and offen­sive egg­plant emo­jis

via The Paris Review.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

The Open Syl­labus Project Gath­ers 1,000,000 Syl­labi from Uni­ver­si­ties & Reveals the 100 Most Fre­quent­ly-Taught Books

Take the 146-Ques­tion Knowl­edge Test Thomas Edi­son Gave to Prospec­tive Employ­ees (1921)

Take The Near Impos­si­ble Lit­er­a­cy Test Louisiana Used to Sup­press the Black Vote (1964)

Ayun Hal­l­i­day is an author, illus­tra­tor, and Chief Pri­ma­tol­o­gist of the East Vil­lage Inky zine. She lives in fear that her youngest child will pen a mem­oir titled I Was a Home­schooled 8th Grad­er and Oth­er Chillling True Life Tales. Fol­low her @AyunHalliday

Werner Herzog Teaches His First Online Course on Filmmaking

FYI: If you sign up for a Mas­ter­Class course by click­ing on the affil­i­ate links in this post, Open Cul­ture will receive a small fee that helps sup­port our oper­a­tion.

One hears much, these days, about the mis­sions of new tech com­pa­nies to “dis­rupt” exist­ing indus­tries, from retail to pub­lish­ing to taxi cabs to edu­ca­tion. We’ve regard­ed that as pri­mar­i­ly the domain of Sil­i­con Val­ley twen­tysome­things, but why can’t a Ger­man film­mak­er with a near­ly 55-year career under his belt get in on the action? Wern­er Her­zog, hav­ing already done much to dis­rupt film as we know it, has in recent years turned his atten­tion toward dis­rupt­ing film schools, which com­pose an indus­try not espe­cial­ly com­pat­i­ble with his own vision of the hon­est and rig­or­ous craft of cin­e­ma.

We’ve fea­tured Her­zog’s in-per­son Rogue Film School work­shops before, but now, accord­ing to Enter­tain­ment Week­ly’s Derek Lawrence, “online edu­ca­tion plat­form Mas­ter­Class announced that Her­zog is teach­ing an online class on fea­ture and doc­u­men­tary film­mak­ing, where the var­i­ous lessons will include sto­ry­telling, cin­e­matog­ra­phy, inter­view tech­niques, and how to work with actors.” The arti­cle quotes the mak­er of fea­tures like Fitz­car­ral­do and Aguirre, the Wrath of God and doc­u­men­taries like Lit­tle Dieter Needs to Fly and Griz­zly Man offer­ing some­thing like a mis­sion state­ment: “Ulti­mate­ly, my own goal is to be a good sol­dier of cin­e­ma and if I can inspire one or two of you out there, to become a good sol­dier, then I have done every­thing I should do here.”

You can learn more about Mas­ter­class from the New York Times’ Lau­ra M. Hol­son, who describes the enter­prise, the brain­child of Los Ange­les-raised Sil­i­con Val­ley entre­pre­neur David Rogi­er, as “a series of online cours­es taught by peo­ple who are the best in the world at what they do,” includ­ing Annie Lei­bovitz on Pho­tog­ra­phy, Her­bie Han­cock on Jazz, Jane Goodall on Con­serv­ing the Envi­ron­ment and Wern­er Her­zog on film­mak­ing. Her­zog’s course can be tak­en by sign­ing up for an All Access Pass, which gives you access to every course in the Mas­ter­class course cat­a­logue, includ­ing cours­es from many oth­er film­mak­ers.

“You spend way too much time in the film school, it costs way too much mon­ey,” says the self-taught film­mak­er in the course’s trail­er above. “You can learn the essen­tials of film­mak­ing on your own with­in two weeks.” Or, in the for­mat that Mas­ter­Class has devel­oped as they go along just like Her­zog did when he first began mak­ing movies (and, giv­en his endur­ing inven­tive­ness, con­tin­ues to do today), you can osten­si­bly learn it in five hours of online video. You may not cap­ture any of Her­zog’s beloved “ecsta­t­ic truth” imme­di­ate­ly after­ward, but you’ll sure­ly get your fee’s worth of thrilling sto­ries of the film­mak­ing life along the way. Sign up for Her­zog’s class here.

You can take this class by sign­ing up for a Mas­ter­Class’ All Access Pass. The All Access Pass will give you instant access to this course and 85 oth­ers for a 12-month peri­od.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Wern­er Her­zog Cre­ates Required Read­ing & Movie View­ing Lists for Enrolling in His Film School

Wern­er Herzog’s Rogue Film School: Apply & Learn the Art of Gueril­la Film­mak­ing & Lock-Pick­ing

Wern­er Her­zog Picks His 5 Favorite Films

Por­trait Wern­er Her­zog: The Director’s Auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal Short Film from 1986

Wern­er Her­zog Gets Shot Dur­ing Inter­view, Doesn’t Miss a Beat

Based in Seoul, Col­in Mar­shall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and style. He’s at work on a book about Los Ange­les, A Los Ange­les Primer, the video series The City in Cin­e­ma, the crowd­fund­ed jour­nal­ism project Where Is the City of the Future?, and the Los Ange­les Review of Books’ Korea Blog. Fol­low him on Twit­ter at @colinmarshall or on Face­book.

5 Books Bill Gates Wants You to Read This Summer

Bill Gates — Microsoft CEO turned phil­an­thropist and life­long learner—has just rec­om­mend­ed five books to put on your sum­mer read­ing list. If you’re look­ing for a light beach read, you’ve come to the wrong place. But if you have a Gates-like mind, you might find that these books will make you “think in new ways” and per­haps keep you up past your bed­time. On his web­site, the video above comes accom­pa­nied by rea­sons for read­ing each work. Below we’re quot­ing direct­ly from Mr. Gates:

Sev­en­eves, by Neal Stephen­son. I hadn’t read any sci­ence fic­tion for a decade when a friend rec­om­mend­ed this nov­el. I’m glad she did. The plot gets going in the first sen­tence, when the moon blows up. Peo­ple fig­ure out that in two years a cat­a­clysmic mete­or show­er will wipe out all life on Earth, so the world unites on a plan to keep human­i­ty going by launch­ing as many space­craft as pos­si­ble into orbit. You might lose patience with all the infor­ma­tion you’ll get about space flight—Stephenson, who lives in Seat­tle, has clear­ly done his research—but I loved the tech­ni­cal details.Sev­en­eves inspired me to rekin­dle my sci-fi habit.

How Not to be Wrong, by Jor­dan Ellen­berg. Ellen­berg, a math­e­mati­cian and writer, explains how math plays into our dai­ly lives with­out our even know­ing it. Each chap­ter starts with a sub­ject that seems fair­ly straightforward—electoral pol­i­tics, say, or the Mass­a­chu­setts lottery—and then uses it as a jump­ing-off point to talk about the math involved. In some places the math gets quite com­pli­cat­ed, but he always wraps things up by mak­ing sure you’re still with him. The book’s larg­er point is that, as Ellen­berg writes, “to do math­e­mat­ics is to be, at once, touched by fire and bound by reason”—and that there are ways in which we’re all doing math, all the time.

The Vital Ques­tion, by Nick Lane. Nick is one of those orig­i­nal thinkers who makes you say: More peo­ple should know about this guy’s work. He is try­ing to right a sci­en­tif­ic wrong by get­ting peo­ple to ful­ly appre­ci­ate the role that ener­gy plays in all liv­ing things. He argues that we can only under­stand how life began, and how liv­ing things got so com­plex, by under­stand­ing how ener­gy works. It’s not just the­o­ret­i­cal; mito­chon­dria (the pow­er plants in our cells) could play a role in fight­ing can­cer and mal­nu­tri­tion. Even if the details of Nick’s work turn out to be wrong, I sus­pect his focus on ener­gy will be seen as an impor­tant con­tri­bu­tion to our under­stand­ing of where we come from.

The Pow­er to Com­pete, by Ryoichi Mik­i­tani and Hiroshi Mik­i­tani. I have a soft spot for Japan that dates back three decades or so, when I first trav­eled there for Microsoft. Today, of course, Japan is intense­ly inter­est­ing to any­one who fol­lows glob­al eco­nom­ics. Why were its companies—the jug­ger­nauts of the 1980s—eclipsed by com­peti­tors in South Korea and Chi­na? And can they come back? Those ques­tions are at the heart of this series of dia­logues between Ryoichi, an econ­o­mist who died in 2013, and his son Hiroshi, founder of the Inter­net com­pa­ny Rakuten. Although I don’t agree with every­thing in Hiroshi’s pro­gram, I think he has a num­ber of good ideas. The Pow­er to Com­pete is a smart look at the future of a fas­ci­nat­ing coun­try.

Sapi­ens: A Brief His­to­ry of Humankind, by Noah Yuval Harari. Both Melin­da and I read this one, and it has sparked lots of great con­ver­sa­tions at our din­ner table. Harari takes on a daunt­ing chal­lenge: to tell the entire his­to­ry of the human race in just 400 pages. He also writes about our species today and how arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence, genet­ic engi­neer­ing, and oth­er tech­nolo­gies will change us in the future. Although I found things to dis­agree with—especially Harari’s claim that humans were bet­ter off before we start­ed farming—I would rec­om­mend Sapi­ens to any­one who’s inter­est­ed in the his­to­ry and future of our species.

You can get more ideas from Bill Gates at Gates Notes.

If you’re look­ing to do some more DIY edu­ca­tion this sum­mer, don’t miss the fol­low­ing rich col­lec­tions:

700 Free Audio Books: Down­load Great Books for Free.

800 Free eBooks for iPad, Kin­dle & Oth­er Devices.

1200 Free Online Cours­es from Top Uni­ver­si­ties.

If you would like to sign up for Open Culture’s free email newslet­ter, please find it here. It’s a great way to see our new posts, all bun­dled in one email, each day.

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site. It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal, Patre­on, and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

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245 Films by Female Directors You Can Stream Right Now on Netflix

the punk singer

Sad­ly, despite great strides since the 1970s, Hol­ly­wood (and film­mak­ing in gen­er­al) is still a boys’ club, espe­cial­ly when it comes to those behind the cam­era. Until Kathryn Bigelow won her 2010 Oscar for The Hurt Lock­er, no female direc­tor had claimed the prize. And not a sin­gle woman has even been nom­i­nat­ed for Best Cin­e­matog­ra­phy.

Direc­tor Sal­ly Pot­ter calls it the cast-iron ceil­ing, and says it’s still very dif­fi­cult to get a film made, even for a direc­tor with her pedi­gree.

But as some­body on this Metafil­ter thread sug­gests, if we want to sup­port female direc­tors, we need to watch more films by female direc­tors. This Google Doc lists 245 films direct­ed by women that are cur­rent­ly avail­able on Net­flix. It’s a mix of art house and pop­corn fare, and all worth check­ing out…and no doubt many Open Cul­ture read­ers have seen quite a few already. Here’s our Top Ten sug­ges­tions from that list, with four more thrown in for good mea­sure. And yes, we know that Net­flix is a paid ser­vice, but, not to wor­ry, you can sign up for a month-long free tri­al.

There’s so many more choic­es at the link, from doc­u­men­tary to dra­ma and hor­ror to romance.

And while we’re at it, that oth­er stream­ing ser­vice, Hulu, has the full Cri­te­ri­on col­lec­tion, where many more female direc­tors can be found: Agnes Var­da, Cather­ine Breil­lat, Chan­tal Ack­er­man, Bar­bara Kop­pel, and more. Hulu offers a one-week free tri­al when you sign up.

via Metafil­ter

Relat­ed con­tent:

85 Com­pelling Films Star­ring and/or Direct­ed By Women of Col­or: A List Cre­at­ed by Direc­tor Ava DuVer­nay & Friends on Twit­ter

100 Over­looked Films Direct­ed by Women: See Selec­tions from Sight & Sound Magazine’s New List

An Ambi­tious List of 1400 Films Made by Female Film­mak­ers

Ted Mills is a free­lance writer on the arts who cur­rent­ly hosts the artist inter­view-based FunkZone Pod­cast. You can also fol­low him on Twit­ter at @tedmills, read his oth­er arts writ­ing at tedmills.com and/or watch his films here.

Ta-Nehisi Coates’ List of 13 Recommended Books

Ta-Nehisi Coates has been rid­ing a wave so high these past few years that most hon­est writ­ers would con­fess to at least some small degree of envy. And yet anyone—writer or reader—who appre­ci­ates Coates’ rig­or­ous schol­ar­ship, styl­is­tic mas­tery, and enthralling per­son­al voice must also admit that the acco­lades are well-earned. Win­ner of the Nation­al Book Award for his sec­ond auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal work, Between the World and Me and recip­i­ent of a MacArthur “Genius Grant,” Coates is fre­quent­ly called on to dis­cuss the seem­ing­ly intractable racism in the U.S., both its long, grit­ty his­to­ry and con­tin­u­a­tion into the present. (On top of these cre­den­tials, Coates, an unabashed com­ic book nerd, is now pen­ning the revived Black Pan­ther title for Mar­vel, cur­rent­ly the year’s best-sell­ing com­ic.)

As a senior edi­tor at The Atlantic, Coates became a nation­al voice for black Amer­i­ca with arti­cles on the para­dox­es of Barack Oba­ma’s pres­i­den­cy and the boot­straps con­ser­vatism of Bill Cos­by (pub­lished before the comedian’s pros­e­cu­tion). His arti­cle “The Case for Repa­ra­tions,” a lengthy, his­tor­i­cal exam­i­na­tion of Redlin­ing, brought him fur­ther into nation­al promi­nence. So high was Coates’ pro­file after his sec­ond book that Toni Mor­ri­son declared him the heir to James Baldwin’s lega­cy, a man­tle that has weighed heav­i­ly and sparked some back­lash, though Coates court­ed the com­par­i­son him­self by styling Between the World and Me after Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time. In doing so, writes Michael Eric Dyson, “Coates did a dar­ing thing… waged a bet that the Amer­i­can pub­lic could absorb even more of the epis­to­lary device, and wrote a book-length essay to his son.”

Not only did Amer­i­ca “absorb” the device; the nation’s read­ers mar­veled at Coates’ deft mix­ture of exis­ten­tial tough­ness and emo­tion­al vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty; his intense, unsen­ti­men­tal take on U.S. racist ani­mus and his mov­ing, lov­ing por­traits of his close friends and fam­i­ly. As a let­ter from a father to his son, the book also works as a teach­ing tool, and Coates lib­er­al­ly salts his per­son­al nar­ra­tive with the sources of his own edu­ca­tion in African Amer­i­can his­to­ry and pol­i­tics from his father and his years at Howard Uni­ver­si­ty. In the wake of the fame the book has brought him, he has con­tin­ued what he seems to view as a pub­lic mis­sion to edu­cate, and inter­views and dis­cus­sions with the writer fre­quent­ly involve digres­sions on his sources of infor­ma­tion, as well as the books that move and moti­vate him.

So it was when Coates sat down with New York Times Mag­a­zine and ProP­ub­li­ca reporter Nikole Han­nah-Jones at New York’s Schom­burg Cen­ter for Research in Black Cul­ture last year. You can watch the full inter­view at the top of the post. Dur­ing the course of the hour-long talk, Coates men­tioned the books below, in the hopes, he says, that “folks who read” Between the World and Me “will read this book, and then go read a ton of oth­er books.” He both began and end­ed his rec­om­men­da­tions with Bald­win.

1. “The Fire Next Time” in Col­lect­ed Essays by James Bald­win.

2. The Night of the Gun: A Reporter Inves­ti­gates the Dark­est Sto­ry of His Life, His Own by David Carr

3. The Half Has Nev­er Been Told: Slav­ery and the Mak­ing of Amer­i­can Cap­i­tal­ism by Edward E. Bap­tist

4. Bat­tle Cry of Free­dom: The Era of the Civ­il War by James McPher­son

5. Mak­ing the Sec­ond Ghet­to: Race and Hous­ing in Chica­go, 1940–1960 by Arnold R. Hirsch

6. Fam­i­ly Prop­er­ties: Race, Real Estate, and the Exploita­tion of Black Urban Amer­i­ca by Beryl Sat­ter

7. Con­fed­er­ate States of Amer­i­ca — Dec­la­ra­tion of the Imme­di­ate Caus­es Which Induce and Jus­ti­fy the Seces­sion of South Car­oli­na from the Fed­er­al Union from Aval­on Project, Lil­lian Gold­man Law Library, Yale Law School

8. Show­down: Thur­good Mar­shall and the Supreme Court nom­i­na­tion That Changed Amer­i­ca by Wil Hay­good

9. Amer­i­can Slav­ery, Amer­i­can Free­dom: The Ordeal of Colo­nial Vir­ginia by Edmund S. Mor­gan

10. Race­craft: The Soul of Inequal­i­ty in Amer­i­can Life by Karen E. Fields and Bar­bara J. Fields

11. When and Where I Enter: The Impact of Black Women on Race and Sex in Amer­i­ca by Paula Gid­dings

12. Ida: A Sword Among Lions: Ida B. Wells and the Cam­paign against Lynch­ing by Paula J. Gid­dings

13. Out of the House of Bondage: The Trans­for­ma­tion of the Plan­ta­tion House­hold by Thavo­lia Glymph

Final­ly, Coates ref­er­ences the famous debate between James Bald­win and William F. Buck­ley at Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty in 1965, which you can read about and watch in full here.

via The New York Pub­lic Library

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Toni Mor­ri­son Dis­pens­es Writ­ing Wis­dom in 1993 Paris Review Inter­view

James Bald­win Bests William F. Buck­ley in 1965 Debate at Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty

Stephen King Cre­ates a List of 96 Books for Aspir­ing Writ­ers to Read

Ernest Hem­ing­way Cre­ates a Read­ing List for a Young Writer, 1934

Michael Stipe Rec­om­mends 10 Books for Any­one Marooned on a Desert Island

Josh Jones is a writer and musi­cian based in Durham, NC. Fol­low him at @jdmagness


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