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Tag Archives: boston

first thoughts: being interviewed about sexuality + society

28 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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boston, gender and sexuality, religion

On Wednesday evening I sat down for two hours to speak with Holly Donovan, a PhD candidate in Sociology at Boston University. Holly is conducting interviews with LGBTQ-identified folks in the Boston area as part of her research on sexuality, religion, and community. If you identify as queer and live in the Boston area, check out her call for participants, which she asked me to pass along. For me, it was a unique opportunity to be on the opposite side of the microphone: usually I’m the one asking the life history questions!

tea is essential for good conversations

For the next three weeks, I’ll be completing phase two of the project — keeping a journal of observations and thoughts about my experience of being queer in Boston — but for now, I thought I’d share some initial reflections about our conversation.

Life narratives are inherently chaotic on the first go-around. Unless you’re focused on a very specific aspect of your life (and even then, as my OE oral history project shows, things can get out of hand very quickly) it’s fairly impossible to tell a linear story that encompasses all of the salient details of what goes into making a person. Even with the keywords “sexual orientation,” “religion,” and “social interactions” that’s a hell of a lot of territory to cover! I found myself skipping around a lot in time and missing stuff that was probably important. I woke up around 3am on Thursday morning and was mentally adding things to the “remember to tell her next time …” list.

My sexual orientation isn’t a primary identity category for me; being in a sexual relationship was much more of a turning point. This might seem weird, given the amount of time I spend thinking and writing about human sexuality — but I think that’s kinda the point. In my own personal life, there’s feminist politics (of which rights for non-straight folks were long a part of my political interests), there’s queer and sexual history (which I’m engaged in as a scholar), and then there’s the whole my-life-as-a-sexual-being thing. Which is awesome. But doesn’t really have so much to do with orientation as it does with physical experience, with relationships, with how I understand my sexuality as it relates to my ethics, my body, my interactions. In that space, I don’t think of myself as someone with a sexual orientation or identity — I just think of myself as (enthusiastically!!) sexual.

I don’t socialize in primarily queer spaces. Since one of Holly’s questions is about the interactions of queer-identified folks with straight-identified folks, I thought a bit before we sat down about my circles of friendship and the primary spaces where I socialize — both in person and online. Online more than in-person spaces are, I would say, “queer” (inasmuch as “queer” overlaps with “feminist,” which it sometimes does and sometimes doesn’t). But my circle of friends is pretty sexually and gender diverse, and they often overlap. That is, when Hanna and I get together with friends we don’t have our “gay” friends and then our “straight” friends. We have friends. We don’t socialize in spaces that are organized around sexual identity (i.e. gay bars or lesbian book clubs). Possibly because neither Hanna nor I were ever in search of an active dating scene? And I don’t think either of us has ever particularly yearned for the type of social solidarity of “safe” space that gay neighborhoods or social clubs might provide. The one exception to this is our health center, which we picked in part because of its history in LGBT health activism.

This isn’t exactly news, but opposition makes me feel defiant and irritable, rather than judged and cowed. When people are cranky about lesbian PDA, I have the urge to be more publicaly affectionate, not less. I’d argue that both my family background and my long-time singleness both contribute to this. By the time I entered into a relationship, I was much more confident about my presence in the world than I would have been in my teens. You don’t like what you see? Suck it up and deal.

I also don’t have reflexive fear about my physical safety, which is probably a whole tangle of social privileges I’ve experienced throughout my life: class, race, gender presentation, and so forth. Which ties into the idea of straight privilege that I’ve been turning over in my mind for a while now:

“Straight” privilege. I’ve put “straight” in quotation marks ’cause I don’t think it’s a function of being straight so much as being read as straight. Regardless of my own actual sexual desires, about which I didn’t speak about much growing up (except to very close family and friends) I was read as straight, as a single straight woman. I grew up assuming I had just as much right to be in public spaces, to be open about my relationships (sexual or otherwise), to speak up for my politics, as the next person. I think this is a function of race and class too. I’ve heard bi and fluid women talk about this in terms of their relative comfort level at being visibly queer in public relative to a partner who’s been in lesbian relationships longer — that a woman who’s moved through the world in straight relationships for a number of years has come to expect the right to openly acknowledge her partner, the right to kiss him or hold hands or cuddle in public and not only receive little negative feedback but actually get positive social responses. And therefore there’s less reflexive reserve, because they haven’t had to build up that mechanism for self-protection.

My family is awesome. Holly kept asking about negative social aspects of being out, and I couldn’t think of any. Yes, the obvious political/legal discrimination. But in terms of my family accepting my chosen partner on equal terms with my siblings’ partners — that was never a question. The fact she wondered if we were treated differently in my family actually took my by surprise. I mean, I got why she asked (I probably would have, being in her shoes), but that sort of behavior is so out of the realm of the way my family operates that I felt at a loss to explain why that just was never an issue.

My co-workers are awesome. I knew that already, but hadn’t really articulated it before talking with Holly. I’ve never felt unsafe about being openly in a lesbian relationship at work, either with my immediate colleagues or with the higher-ups in the organization. Hanna is my emergency contact, the secondary beneficiary in all my benefits paperwork, if we were married she’d be able to sign on under my health insurance plan, and so forth. People ask after Hanna and there’s no indication that they think of our relationship as any more or less significant in terms of workplace socialization than any of the straight partnerships that come up in daily conversation.

Choosing Hanna changed my relationship to West Michigan. Before Hanna and I got together, I could picture moving back to Michigan if the right job came open … I know how to survive as a political and social minority there (that was the story of my daily life as a child and young adult) but I wouldn’t ask someone else to live with that sort of hostility on a daily basis.  Well, that’s everything from my notes thus far. Now I have three weeks of journaling and a follow-up interview. I’ll be back mid-November with “second thoughts” and possibly “third thoughts” as well!

from the neighborhood: BU bridge

19 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, from the neighborhood, photos

Last Friday, Hanna and I walked from our apartment over to Cambridge via the Boston University bridge which has been under extensive restoration for the past several years. It was a gorgeous September day. Here are a few photographs that we snapped on the bridge.

Hanna looking west up the Charles river
(photo by Anna, obviously)
Moon over I-90 (photo by Hanna)
graffiti on the freight rail  bridge below
(photo by Hanna)
girders in the sun
(photo by Anna)

Cross-posted at …fly over me, evil angel….

four years ago today: "first class, etc."

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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boston, family, four years ago today, hanna, simmons

So in an exercise of sheer archivist-historian self-indulgence, I’ve decided to offer an occasional series this fall that features emails written by 2007 me about my first few months in Boston (and first semester in graduate school). I’m going to kick the series off with an email I sent out to my family on 5 September 2007, on the first day of the fall semester. It features bookstores, libraries, Hanna, classes, and more! I’ve added a few clarifying notes, deleted some individual’s names, and included links to relevent posts from back then. Other than that, it’s a gen-u-ine primary historical source!

From: Anna
To: Brian, Janet, Maggie, Mark, and Joseph
Date: Wed, Sep 5, 2007 at 9:53 PM
Subject: First class, etc.

Hiya all,

Dad wrote earlier and thanked me for keeping y’all “in the loop” about what’s going on in my new life here in Boston. Ha! That’s a losing battle :). Things are happening so swiftly right now, I’m pretty sure I can’t keep up with them myself, let alone keep everyone else up to speed . . .

But here are a few developments in the last 24 hours.

(No, you don’t all have to read ALL of it, if that’s what you’re thinking B & M . . .)

This morning I spent a couple of hours on the phone with Q, the computer magician at Lean Logistics [a company I was working for remotely], setting up the Virtual Private Network (VPN) connection with Lean Logistics. In order to do this, he set up a WebEx conference connection which (get this!) allowed me to give him a remote view of my desktop and control of the mouse on my computer! So I had the very surreal experience of watching my mouse float around doing things while Q talked in my ear, muttering to himself about what he was doing. It was quite cool, actually. And the most important thing is that it worked! So I am now back on board with the whole data entry thing, and fingers crossed it will turn out to be worth the fuss.

On the other job front, I took the Green “D” line downtown to the Prudential Center today and met R [a department manager at Barnes & Noble, where I had transferred from my previous position in Holland, Mich.]. The store is a very strange, warren-like layout, with the children’s department situated back of beyond . . . but she assured me she tries to schedule at least two people in the department at a time. The schedule sheets and “dailies” of staff assignments are intimidatingly large! She said they have about 120 people on staff (though of course not all in the store at one time). I will be starting work a week from Friday, with a 7:00am-11:00am “zoning” shift, which means shelving and so on in the early morning. The next two weeks I have no closing shifts, thankfully, so that I can get a feel for the public transit routes without worrying about returning to the dorm at midnight. There seem to be no truly straightforward ways directly from the Prudential Center to the residential campus. There is a [subway] station incorporated into the center which stops fairly near the [Simmons] teaching campus, but several blocks away from the residential campus. The alternative is to walk a few blocks from Prudential and then take the subway line that stops right next to the dorm. I will have to ask around about what’s advisable. My impulse would be to refuse to be intimidated, but I also don’t want to take foolish risks.

When I was down at the Prudential Center, I took a very pleasurable detour to the Boston Public Library and signed up for my very own library card. It made me positively giddy and possessive feeling . . . like Eva [a child my mother cared for] signing up for her first library card (well, maybe not THAT giddy). You’ve all seen pictures of the BPL before, but here’s a picture of me with my new card standing on the steps in front of the statue of Our Lady of the Libraries (or whichever muse she’s supposed to be) on Copley Square.

Boston Public Library, Copley Square (September 2007)

Meanwhile, just to add spice to my work life, my friend Hanna — a GSLIS student with whom I’ve been corresponding this past year & just met at the History reception last night — emailed me this morning to say that the archives at Northeastern University, where she works, will be starting a year-long grant project October 1st, for which they need a part-time (10-13 hours/weekly) assistant. They are digitizing records from Freedom House, a civil rights organization from the 1950s that worked to integrate (and keep integrated) neighborhoods in Boston. She is urging me to apply for the job, and her supervisor said I should put in my resume ASAP — so I don’t have a lot of time to decide. At first I was like, “gawd this is too much!” But the more I think about it, the better it sounds . . . it pays $15/hour and it looks like Barnes & Noble won’t be offering me more than around 10 hours a week, which means I lose the permanent part-time status. Without that, there really isn’t much incentive to keep the job for the long haul (aside from the employee discount & pleasure of being around, um, books, which doesn’t seem to be a problem for me!). So, I’m going to apply for the job, and if I get it probably a) restrict my hours at B&N and b) quit after Christmas. [I didn’t get hired by Northeastern at this interview, but went on to work for them first as an intern and then as a part-time archives assistant a few years later.]

My final stop of the day was the Introduction to Archives class. This is the first of the three Archives core classes, so most of the students in the class are starting their AM (archives management) focus. This can happen either after they’ve already been library science students, or (as in my case) if they come in knowing what they want to focus in, and perhaps even dual-degreeing (can that be a verb?). I don’t know if I’m unusual, but I’d say that I’m less committed to archives as a specific type of library science than I am to doing both history and library science . . . if that makes sense? I get the impression that students dual-degree because the history will be useful in their archives career, or they got into archives through their history undergrad. I wouldn’t say I thought “archives!” when I imagined becoming a librarian, though there are certainly lots of things to recommend it. I mean, it doesn’t take much to get me all enthusiastic about public history, collective memory, material culture, the democratization of access, and so on. But there are moments (like every other one) where I could just as easily become a Public Librarian in some place like . . . oh, Leland? Or drive a bookmobile through the Lake District?

That having been said, I’m sort of on syllabus high right now, which comes before syllabus shock (that sets in after all three courses have had their first days, and I start accumulating project deadlines). Next week, I’ll get to choose my top three choices for the 60-hour internship out of over 100 options Simmons lines up for us. Fingers crossed it’s something with women’s or social justice history, or education . . . it’s Boston, I’m sure I can manage something! Or perhaps something off-beat will catch my eye that I never even thought of.

And the professor, V, seems nice (if a little prone to rambling . . . really, how many profs have you met who DON’T have that tendency?) She’s enthusiastic, available, and her basic message was: plan ahead, keep me informed, and don’t panic.

Well, I should wrap this email up and hunt down my resume for a little polishing (I’m going to put off writing the cover letter until I’ve had a sobering night’s sleep behind me).

Tomorrow I get my first History Methods class — hooray! — in the afternoon. I think that’s the one that has everyone shaking in their boots (“so much reading!” is what I keep hearing . . . um, and this is a problem to us library students HOW??). That and this job application are the last big things on my list this week. Other than that, I’m going to try and finish my online technology tutorial, open my bank account, and pick up my ZipCar card and paperwork at the main office downtown. And Saturday, Hanna is taking me out to all the best used bookstores, or to a museum, and her favorite coffee shop . . . or something frivolous, geeky and fun. I finally ordered my “Feminism is for Everyone!” library call number shirt (HQ1190.H67) and am hoping I have it in time to wear on our outing.


I did wear this shirt on our Saturday outing;
To this day, Hanna remains particularly fond of it.

 Love to you all,
Anna

30 @ 30: urban living [#7]

31 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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boston, maine, michigan, thirty at thirty, travel

Four years ago today, I hit the road in a rental car full of earthly possessions to drive from Holland (Mich.) to Boston (Mass.) and begin my life as a graduate student and city dweller. Starting next week, I’m tentatively planning a whole series of posts using emails and photographs from the fall of 2007, to reflect back on that transition and what that first semester at Simmons (and my first few months in Boston) were like.

In this installment of 30@30, though, I want to talk about being a city dweller more generally, and my experience of visiting and living in cities as a young person and as an adult. I want to reflect on my perceptions of urban environments and the pros and cons of living in cities versus smaller towns versus more rural spaces (all three of which I’ve experienced, to a greater or lesser extent). Becoming an urbanite has been a struggle for me, and there’s a part of me that will never quite feel at home in the city — possibly the part of me that did feel at home, during my teens, in the wilderness of Michigan’s upper peninsula or in the foothills of the Southern Oregon Cascades. (My adolescent dream of becoming a backwoods guide will be featured in an upcoming 30@30 post on camping.) At the same time, I was born and grew up in a city of not immoderate size: around 35K in the city limits, according to the 2000 census, with roughly twice that number in the surrounding metro area. I lived two blocks from the library, less than a mile from the college where my father worked, and about the same distance from the downtown that — by the time I was a teenager and these things were relevant — boasted half a dozen places for decent coffee and two well-stocked bookstores. All the necessary amenities of life.

lemonjello’s coffee shop (Holland, Mich.)
photograph by Hanna

Still, there were ways in which Holland was distinctly different from a major metropolitan area like Chicago or Boston. There was really no public transit system to speak of, meaning you pretty much needed a car to get around in a serious way — sure, I had a bike and everything, but stuff like grocery shopping for a family of five can’t really be done on a bicycle or on foot. Most of the neighborhoods I knew as a child consisted of single-family homes, duplexes, and — closer to the college — student dorms. Apartments and condos existed, but not on the scale of a place like Boston.

My hands-down favorite thing about Chicago, the first few times I visited as a child, were the escalators at the hotel and the subway. Yes, I was easy to please.

As regular readers of this blog have probably gathered (if they didn’t already know) I mostly lived in Holland until 2007, and the elsewhere places I lived were mostly more rural, not less: Lincoln, Oregon; Hawk Hill, Missouri; Crawfordsville, Indiana. Cities were places I visited for a day or two (Chicago, Seattle) or a week (San Francisco) or at most, a month (Victoria, B.C.). I associated cities with vacations and travel, with the chance to try out new cuisines, shop used bookstores, visit museums, attend the theatre. Chicago, the city we most frequently visited when I was young, was the land of the Field Museum, the Chicago Theatre, the elaborate Christmas windows along Michigan Avenue, and the fresh roasted candied almonds from street vendors. It was a magical place, one that offered a departure from normal routine.

My first foray into city life was during my year abroad in Aberdeen, Scotland (2003-2004). Aberdeen is only the twenty-fifth most populous city in the UK, coming in between Salford (near Manchester) and Dudley (in the Midlands). In 2008 it reported a population of just over 210K. True, I was living in student housing during that time, and not working since I was studying full-time and had no work visa. So life in Aberdeen was quite different from navigating urban living as a renter and young professional. But there were experiences I had there, and skills I learned, that are not entirely un-applicable to life in Boston. I learned, for example, that even in cities green spaces can be found — though sometimes it takes diligence and a willingness to use multiple forms of public transportation. I learned how different (and often faster!) navigating a city by foot can be from navigating by car or bus. I learned that, even as a student, it pays to be connected to city life outside the university — whether it’s by attending concerts and plays, becoming a subscriber at the local public library, or spending time at coffee shops not exclusively frequented by students. I learned how to read a bus timetable and how to pay for a cab. I learned to be sensible but also not to live in fear of the city streets at night simply because I was alone and female.

Seaton Park, Old Aberdeen (March 2004)
The North Sea is on the horizon.

One of the hardest lessons I learned was that some cities are just too large to know completely. There were parts of Aberdeen I simply never went to during my ten months there. There are parts of Boston I have never yet visited in the four years I’ve been here. It’s unsettling. I don’t like it. It makes me feel a bit blind — like those dreams where your vision refuses to come into focus.

I came back to the States from my year abroad certain I didn’t want to live in a city the rest of my life. Yet the rub is, of course, that most schools big enough to host graduate programs, most cities large enough to host a healthy number of libraries, most areas with a high probability of meeting someone youngish and also single who shares your interests — most of these things require a fairly dense population. So I ended up in Boston.

Boston skyline (November 2007)

These days I’ve made my peace with the city (see 2008, 2009, and 2010), though I can honestly say I’m not thrilled with the prospect of living here the rest of my life. Check back again in another four years and that answer might have changed.  There are days when I would rather be anywhere but here, days when I feel so claustrophobic I don’t think I’ll be able to stand it, days when I hate with a white-hot passion the freakin’ logistics of city life. There are also days when I realize how much I’ve made certain parts of Boston “home” — and that if it ever came to the point where Hanna and I were seriously considering a relocation, I would develop a hard-core case of pre-emptive nostalgia for the places we would be leaving behind.

A few weeks ago, when the T was delayed and then Red Sox fans and commuters were so packed into the subway cars that I waited over an hour for a train before just giving up and walking home in the rain, I was feeling pissy enough to come up with what I now think of as my “urban angst” list: the top five reasons why I hate city life. I’ll share them with you in a moment. The thing is, that when I had calmed down and considered the list I realized that my top five reasons why I enjoy living in Boston are actually the flip-side of the top five rather-be-anywhere-but-here items. I’m not sure what to make of that, other than simply to observe that like so many things in life, it only gets more complicated the more you think about it.



Laundry drying in the North End, Boston (May 2009)

 My urban angst list is as follows:

  • The Commute. Before Boston, I never lived more than, say, a twenty minute drive at most from where I worked or went to school. Usually it was closer to a five-minute drive, and a walk of a mile or two. These days, I live about two miles from work but the commute from door to door takes anywhere from twenty minutes (on a good day, when we walk straight onto a train) to an hour plus. I resent that I don’t have the option of skipping this part of my day. And it can make me feel trapped when the only way to get out of town is to take the train (or multiple trains) to get anywhere rural or green. Or to rent a car, which is then another additional expense.
  • Errands. Errands have never been more complicated. We have a plethora of options when it comes to buying groceries and other necessities and yes, most of them are thankfully on the walk from work to home or in the vicinity. But there’s this thing you don’t think about when you’re used to running errands in a car, and that’s how much shit you can reasonably juggle with two hands and a shoulder bag. There are weeks when I feel like my life outside of work is almost entirely dictated by the errands we need to run and the logistics of getting there and back. Rachel @ Women’s Health News has written a brilliant post on this subject recently, reflecting on the difficulty of buying groceries without a car.
  • Weather. Before moving to Boston, I had never really thought about how much more the weather matters in a big city. This might seem counter-intuitive, but when you don’t have a car and you’re either walking or taking public transit to get around you need to dress for the weather with much more care than I ever needed to back in Michigan. And you need to go out prepared for the weather to change by the end of the day, because there’s no option for running home at lunch to grab an extra sweater or your umbrella. The heat is also more intense here, and when you walk two miles to work on a humid summer day that means taking an extra change of clothes and some heavy-duty deodorant with you.
  • Apartment Living. Cities are expensive, and while Hanna and I have decent landlords, relatively quiet neighbors right now (knock on wood), and a lovely tree-shaded living room, our apartment is tiny compared to what I’m used to. Tiny and expensive. I’ll just come right out and say we pay $1250/month for our one-bedroom place, which is about par for the course in the area where we live. Hanna wishes we could have chickens, or at least room for compost. I wish we had a kitchen that more than one person could work in comfortably. And it would be nice to have storage space for things like suitcases and maybe a bike. The smallness of the space also makes entertaining more than one friend at a time difficult, which means get-togethers usually require meeting in some third space — something that inevitably costs more than hosting folks at home. I miss the days when I could have friends over to cook a meal, eat dinner at an actual table, and watch Masterpiece Theater in a room that had chairs for everyone.
  • The Illusion of Cultural Smorgasbord. Cities are full of amazing things to see and do: museums, lectures, theatre, concerts, author talks, walking tours, festivals, food and wine tasting, film series, the list could go on and on. There are specialty food shops to die for, and restaurants for every taste and occasion. The thing is, arts and culture stuff is (once again) expensive. And not only expensive, but often happens at times and/or in places that make it prohibitive to get to. Maybe there’s a lecture on women’s history that starts at 5:15pm which is technically after I get out of work, but it’s across town and there’s no way I’ll reach it unless I take a taxi for $40.00 which I simply don’t have. Those sorts of calculations. We’re no longer students, which means we aren’t eligible for any standard discounts for things like theatre or concerts, most of which are priced right out of our range. As someone who works at a non-profit cultural institution myself, I don’t necessarily think these things are overpriced — but the reality is that the cost of most of them is beyond what we can afford. So there are great things to do and see in Boston, but as people who are busy living here, there’s only so much we get to take advantage of.

My flip-side list:

  • My Job. If there’s a reason I want to stay in Boston, right now, beyond the fact that Hanna is happy here, it’s that I love my job. And a place like the MHS can really only thrive in a densely-populated urban environment, with a steady flow of graduate students and faculty, and moneyed families willing to support cultural institutions at a level of giving that most of us simply cannot afford (see “The Illusion of Cultural Smorgasbord”). As a librarian who wants to work in an independent research library or archive (i.e. not a public library and not an academic library) I only have so many options, and most of them are in urban areas — the Newberry Library in Chicago, for example, or one of the handful of LGBT archives like the Herstory Archive in New York City.
  • Public Transit. As much as depending on public transit can feel limiting (see “Commute”), I’m really glad to live in a city that offers a decent amount of service, and to live in an area where I can access it easily — both buses and subways — to get to the places I most need to go. I would not want to own or secure a car in Boston, and I’m glad Hanna and I don’t have to worry about things like car payments, insurance, and upkeep on one or two vehicles. It’s also great to live in an area that supports programs like Zipcar (car sharing) and Hubway (bicycle sharing).
  • Walking the City. The logistics of errands drive me crazy, but I do love the fact that we live in a city where walking is a feasible, even pleasant, option for many of our travels. And as much as I miss the five-minute drive to work in the morning, I enjoy being able to get in my daily exercise along with my commute, rather than having to get up at 5am to go jogging before I make my way to the train or get into the car.
  • Food Choices. If we ever more to a less urban area, I’m going to miss the plethora of options we currently have for grocery shopping and dining out. As expensive as it can sometimes be, it’s also wonderful to be able to look at pretty much any recipe and know that somewhere in Boston there’s a store that will offer the ingredients you need to make it. Part of getting to know — and feeling at home in — the city is knowing where you, personally, like to go for your favorite olives (J. Pace & Sons) or the best vanilla beans (Polcari’s). Which bakeries offer the second-day bags of bagels at $2/bag (Kupel’s), which coffee shop offers your favorite French Roast (Boston Common Coffee Co.), and the place to get baked raisin donuts on Saturday mornings (Clear Flour Bakery).
  • $1 Carts. So a lot of things are more expensive in the city — from apartments to your morning latte — but some are cheaper. Mainly I’m thinking of used books, and the fact that Boston has a strong enough used book market to support a dangerous number of used book stores many of which feature substantial $1 sections with rapid turn-over and a fairly good selection. Sure you have to be willing to browse often and buy on impulse, but who doesn’t want to do that where books are concerned!

With that, I think I’ve taken up more than enough of your time this week. I don’t have anything cogent to say about being an urbanite. It’s still a work in progress. We’ll see where the next five, ten, fifteen years takes us.

from the neighborhood: home improvement

29 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, from the neighborhood, hanna

In the midst of Hurricane Irene this week, Hanna and I not only managed a trip to visit friends in Providence, RI, but also built some shelving for the bedroom in order to better organize books and clothes … the dressers we’d saved from the apartment building trash (yes, we have been known to dumpster dive) and the wine crates from the store up the street just weren’t cutting it any longer. The downside, of course, is that we had to spend yesterday evening constructing a 9′ x 7.5’x 1′ shelving unit in our tiny apartment. In tropical humidity.

Ah, the price of literacy.

First, we had to clear a space for the new shelves.
(If only we could keep the wall empty! So restful.)
We moved one of the old bookcases into the closet to hold VHS tapes
and periodicals. Play spot the cat for extra points!
There were 72 bolts to tighten. Ouch!
Gerry supervised from her perch on the piles of books.
By 10pm we had the whole thing constructed and
called it quits for the night.
Here are the shelves mostly filled (the wine crates remained … but our
clothes are finally not buried at the back of the closet!)
The cat’s supervisory responsibilities exhausted her.
And now we have space for more books!
This time we’ve actually interfiled our books for subject continuity!
This bookcase indicates the relationship is serious folks.

And now as I type this, Hanna is making us Tassajara whole wheat millet bread which is one of my new favorite treats! I promise a recipe one of these days. We plan to enjoy it with Magic Hat Hex and matzo-vegetable soup.

Cross-posted at …fly over me, evil angel….

from the neighborhood: chihuly at the mfa

21 Tuesday Jun 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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art, boston, from the neighborhood, photos

Cross-posted at …fly over me, evil angel….

Now that I’m finished with graduate school, I have my weekends back (hooray!) and Hanna and I have been trying to re-learn what it means to spend leisure time together … time not compressed by the anxieties and demands of trying to complete academic work on top of a 35-hour work week and, you know, the daily tasks of living.

Walking home through Fenway Victory Gardens
Photograph by Hanna

I seriously don’t understand how couples who have full-time jobs manage to care for children. Is there time travel involved? Because caring for our family as just two adults is difficult enough.

Anyway. Back to basics. How do you enjoy a weekend that’s truly a weekend … as in: time off from one’s regular mode of employment?

I thought it might be fun to spend a few months playing quasi-tourist in our own city. Particularly since, as an employee of the Massachusetts Historical Society, I have free admission to lots of cultural sites in the region. (Free entertainment always being preferable when you’ve got student loans to pay off!) Over the past four years, I haven’t found a lot of time to make use of this benefit, but I’ve decided that this should change. Therefore: watch for more “from the neighborhood” posts in the coming months, as Hanna and I explore new parts of our own backyard.

Our first stop, this weekend, was the Museum of Fine Arts, just up the road from the MHS. The MFA is currently hosting an ehibit of work by glass artist Dale Chihuly. I’f you’ve never seen Chihuly’s work, I highly recommend checking out the photos and video clips on his website — the installations are breathtaking. I first saw his work at the Frederick Meijer Gardens in Grand Rapids, Michigan about a decade ago and can’t think of anything that’s more soul-enriching than sitting in one of his galleries and soaking in the color. Here are some photographs we took at the exhibition here in Boston.

So much of his work looks like ocean life of some kind
The camera washed out the color on this one, but I love the reflection.
See a better image at Chihuly’s homepage.
See what I mean about the tide pool effect?

Hanna and I agree he should design
sets for Tim Burton…
Chandelier detail
Shadow pictures especially for my mother, who is
currently working on a photography series like this.
Chandelier (by Hanna)
Hard to tell here, but these are massive.
I love seeing his work in organic settings;
sadly, the MFA space had few outdoor installations.
Purple reeds (by Hanna)

All in all, it was an amazing way to spend our Saturday morning. Not sure what we have planned for our next outing, but rest assured I’ll take the camera and report back!

releasing books into the wild

17 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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Tags

books, boston, call to participate, michigan, travel

Through the great apartment clear-out of 2011, Hanna and I built a rather substantial stack of books — mostly titles we’d acquired used on the $1 book carts in Boston, or have duplicates of from graduate courses, etc. — that we no longer felt the need to own. Previously when this has happened, we’ve donated them to Goodwill or the local library book sale or sold them on at one of the myriad used bookshops (all good options!) However, this time around, we’ve decided to try releasing them into the wild via the online book sharing project BookCrossings.

Here is one of the books we’re going to “release into the wild” in upcoming days.

This was a fun memoir by comedian Hillary Carlip that Hanna bought me for $1 last spring to read while I was on my research trip in Oregon. It was great airplane reading. Now we’ve given it a “BCID” code number and written instructions in the front cover for whomever finds the book (once we’ve left it somewhere) to go to the website and enter the code, logging where the book was found and then, hopefully, where the discoverer eventually releases it.  One of the most charming features of the site that I’ve discovered so far is the side-bar widgets that highlight books recently “released” and “caught” around the world.
Since this is a brand-new experiment for us, I don’t have a lot more fun facts to add … but after we’ve released our first batch of 21 books in locations here in Massachusetts, in Vermont, New York, Ontario, and Michigan, and they’ve been out running about for a few weeks I’ll let you know what sorts of adventures they’ve been having. Stay tuned for the sequel!

from the neighborhood: validation thursday

05 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

boston, from the neighborhood, outdoors, photos, web video

cross-posted from …fly over me, evil angel… where I wrote this post for Hanna this morning.

So for some reason, this seems to have been the week from hell for a lot of folks. Here in our household, Hanna has the flu, which is why I’ve volunteered to break radio silence with a photo post so you don’t think she’s been, you know, abducted by Mulder’s alien friends. Or something.

Yeah.

Anyway. Here are some pictures by Hanna from our walk last weekend along the Charles River Esplanade. May 1st, through some strange coincidence, happened to be one of the first truly gorgeous spring/summer days here in Boston — and we took photos to prove it!

Even the sailboats were enjoying the weather
Joggers and walkers were out in spades; and leaves
are finally starting to fill out along bare branches.
About halfway along the walk, we found that someone
had been busy with chalk writing encouragements on the pavement.
Encouragements like this — charming in their artlessness.
(And to be honest, moving as well — that someone took the time.)
This was my favorite. The text reads:
“<– DUCK. Don't be afraid to fail (even at drawing)"
This was Hanna’s favorite. The text reads:
“Just keep swimming!” (and a picture of a fish)

All of which reminded me of T.J Thyne’s little gem of a film, which really should be broadcast on a weekly (daily? hourly?) basis across all forms of media worldwide. Possibly then there wouldn’t be so many people doing stupid things which make us sad. It’s 16:24 and I swear it’s worth it. Make time in your day. You’ll thank us.

We hope to see you again next week for our regularly scheduled programming.

from the neighborhood: 4-H VPs

07 Monday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, family, from the neighborhood, hanna

This passed Saturday, Hanna volunteered as a judge for one of the local 4-H clubs’ Visual Presentations competitions. Hanna used to do 4-H as a child in Maine, and a colleague at Countway roped her into getting involved in the day’s activities. I tagged along as the driver (and last-minute door monitor).

Audience members listen to a young Junior class (ages 8-13) presenter
Hanna (in blue sweater) takes notes on a presentation

There’s already been talk of Hanna joining the advisory committee … so there may be more 4-H in our near future. I promise if I come across any bunnies I will photograph them and provide pictures here on the blog!

from the neighborhood: shark attack!

18 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, from the neighborhood, photos

Following the recent snow day here in Boston, Hanna and I noticed this snowman along our usual walk to work (outside an apartment building near Audubon Circle for those who know the area). Thought y’all would enjoy the creativity at work here!

Why is the snowman worried?
Snowsharks!

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