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Tag Archives: photos

birthday week photo no. 2: baby anna sleeps like a cat

26 Saturday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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holidays, photos

Mark and Anna take a nap (circa April 1981)

Every time I look at this picture, something about the posture of baby me reminds me of our cat Geraldine. Something about the way my arms are all out in front of me on Dad’s belly (although with the cat it would be her favorite wool blanket). Since I was five weeks early I had very little body fat; note my frighteningly skeletal fingers. Most of the bulk you see in under the onesie is actually the infant diapers, which covered me from butt to armpit. Thankfully, I quickly started growing … and didn’t really stop for the next eighteen years!

happy birthday mom!

25 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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holidays, photos

Today is my mother’s birthday. Happy birthday Mom!


Anna Jane and Janet Ann (circa April 1981)

 Thirty years ago on this day, when my mother Janet celebrated her 31st birthday she was still pregnant with me. Five days later, I got tired of waiting and decided to make my entrance into the world, a full five weeks before my anticipated due date. (I always did like to get ahead of myself).

As a special birthday request this year, I asked my mother to pick out some of her favorite photographs from my early childhood years to be scanned and posted on my blog during “birthday week.” So between now and next Friday, look forward to some incredibly dated and fun family photography! (Why else were blogs invented by for embrassing onesself in public, yes?)

Meanwhile, wish my awesome mother many happy returns of the day and another 61 years of kick-ass living, learning and being part of this wacky and wonderful family she helped create.

from the neighborhood: gratuitous geraldine pics

17 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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cat bloggin, from the neighborhood, photos

Geraldine helps with thesis revisions
Geraldine takes after her cousin Toby by sleeping in the napkin basket
Gerry gets sneaky (if she can’t see you, you obviously can’t see her)

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!

$1 reviews: tassajara bread book (in pictures)

04 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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domesticity, family, fun, photos

Last week, while on our winter vacation, Hanna and I went down to the Brattle and picked up a whole stack of books from the $1 cart. One of them was a much-used paperback copy of the 1970s classic Tassajara Bread Book, published by the San Francisco Zen Center.  This is a cookbook along the lines of the Moosewood cookbooks or Diet for a Small Planet: the hand-drawn illustrations are whimsical and the descriptions all sound vaguely as if they were written while the authors were slightly high. A recipe for alfalfa ice cream: “Take it like you find it, or leave it like it is.” For “Oriental” spice muffins: “Inscrutable.” For unkneaded unyeasted bread: “Never made this, but it must be all right.”

And all of the quantities would feed an army. The recipe we ended up making (bagels) we halved and still ended up with two dozen fist-sized bagels.

None of this detracts from the tastyness of the recipes therein, at least to judge by the two we have made thus far: Egg Bagels (#55) and Cheesecake Bar Cookies (#83).  The bagels don’t have a very springy bagel texture on the inside, but are a lovely bread regardless — and fairly easy to boil and bake. They also taste nice reheated in oven or toaster for breakfast or teatime.

TASSAJARA EGG BAGELS

Halved from original; makes 24 small bagels

Sponge:
1 1/2 cups warm water
1/2 Tbl yeast
1/4 cup sugar or honey
3 whole eggs, well beaten
3 cups flour (I used 1 cup white, 2 cups multigrain)

Stage two ingredients:
2-3 cups flour
1/2 cup oil
1/2 Tbl salt

1. Whisk together warm water, yeast and sugar until dissolved. Add in eggs and flour to make a thick muddy “sponge.”

2. Cover the sponge with another 1-2 cups flour (from “stage two” ingredients) and cover the bowl with a towl. Place in a warm, sheltered location (i.e. inside an unheated oven) for about 50 minutes so yeast can ferment.

3. After rising, fold in oil, salt, and work in remaining flour, kneading well until dough comes together away from the sides of the bowl.

4. Cover and let rise for 50 minutes. Punch down and knead lightly.

5. Let rise 20 minutes.

6. Punch down, knead lightly and cut in half. Set half the dough aside and divide the remaining half into half again, then each half into six equal pieces for a total of twelve lumps of dough. Roll each lump into a worm and then pinch the ends together to form rings. (The wider the rings, the more likely you’ll end up with bagel shapes rather than buns!)

7. Boil the rings of dough in water for 10 seconds each (the bagels will float to the top of the water, making it easier to scoop them out) and place on a pan either greased or dusted with cornmeal to reduce sticking.

8. Rest bagels for 20 minutes under a towl while oven heats to 425 degrees (Fahrenheit).

9. Bake bagels for 20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.

joyeux noel

25 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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cat blogging, holidays, photos

Virtual Christmas 2010: Opening presents with extended family in Michigan via Skype
2010-12-25 Photograph by Hanna

Geraldine is unimpressed by the presents, except those that were mailed in the same package as her catnip!
2010-12-25 Photograph by Hanna

from the archive: "queen everett"

16 Thursday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in my historian hat

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archivists, masculinity, northeastern, photos

One of the things I love about working in an archive is the serendipity: the way a search for something else entirely can lead you into a gem of a story that takes you in a whole new direction. This certainly isn’t unique to the archival world — but it’s something that historians and archivists tend to start talking about together when they’re in the same room long enough!

Earlier this week, while hunting down the location of a photograph we had scanned several years ago at Northeastern but failed to properly identify, I was going through a folder of images from Northeastern’s annual Winter Carnival from the 1960s and 70s. Many of the photographs were of the individuals nominated for the position of Winter Carnival Queen — sort of the spring term equivalent of a Homecoming Queen. Lots of 8 x 10 glossies of young women posed alone and in groups, in winter coats throwing snowballs, in ball gowns and (in the case of the girls who won) a sparkling tiara.

Then I came to a small yellowed clipping that featured a photograph of the five young women nominated in 1971 … and the young man, Everett Nau, who had been crowned the Winter Carnival Queen of 1970. The brief caption to the photograph read (in part)

NAU GOOD LUCK GIRLS … Everett Nau, last year’s Winter Carnival Queen, bestows his best wishes upon this year’s recently selected finalists (all girls if you’ll notice). … In this year’s campaign, the judges ruled it mandatory that the contestants be of the female gender.

Well, how could I possibly leave it at that?

So I did a little digging, and here (gentle readers) is what I found out about Everett Nau (class of ’71) and his reign as Winter Carnival Queen of 1970.

Nominees for Winter Queen, 1971
Linda Clare, Kathy McCarthy, Marie Petralia,
Delio Pio, and Everett Nau
(image in Northeastern’s Historical Photographs digital collection)

Nau was an Education major, member of the campus ROTC, columnist for the student newspaper, self-identified as “moderate-right” in political leanings … and also self-identified as male-gendered person.

It appears that Everett’s original nomination barely caused a stir on Northeastern’s campus — most likely because the nominee himself seemed to view the event as something of a lark. The campus newspaper, Northeastern News, offered a full-page spread of photographs showcasing the five nominees on 23 January 1970 (page 5); Everett — like all the other candidates — is shown in a formal head-and-shoulders portrait and more informal poses.  It is in these informal shots that Everett’s gender is highlighted — whereas the women’s photographs bear a resemblance to fashion photographs, Everett is pictured dressed in his ROTC uniform, rifle in hand: we are clearly meant to read him as masculine.  Yet at that moment, this masculinity did not seem to be a barrier to nomination.

And a few weeks later, it was not a barrier to being crowned Winter Carnival Queen.

Once he’d actually been crowned, “Queen Everett” became a bit of an overnight sensation, the Northeastern News reported (13 February 1970).  He was interviewed by newspapers and radio shows nationwide and appearing in news stories as far away as Paris. The 6′ 5″ newlywed (as the newspaper described him) was invited to appear on a game show called To Tell the Truth in which a panel of four celebrities were challenged to identify the true “Queen Everett” among a group of three men (the real Everett and two imposters).

While Nau’s gender was seen as something of an oddity in the context of the Winter Carnival Queen competition, what is striking to a modern-day reader of the newspaper coverage is that his nomination and crowning were not portrayed at the time as any sort of deliberate attempt to disrupt conventional gender roles. Nau’s gender or sexuality is not questioned, and it is only in the aftermath that male candidates are ruled ineligible.

I’ve been unable thus far to find any record of why the post-facto changes in the competition rules were made; I’d be really interested to know who felt Nau’s presence was a threat and why. In the midst of a turbulent year of student protests, women’s liberation, antiwar activism and other upheavals, Nau was hardly positioning himself as a radical — his column for the student paper regularly admonished his fellow students for their disruptive activities (and, as I said, self-identified as “moderate-right” in his politics).  This was not some gender-bending longhair out to mock the system.  Which makes makes me that much more inclined to believe that the subsequent rule changes had much more to do with peoples’ underlying discomfort with cross-gender categorization than Nau as some sort of radical.

Amazing what lengths we will go to preserve the binary gender system.

sunday smut: much-delayed women of who no. 2

05 Sunday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in linkspam

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fun, movies, photos, whoniverse

I promised more Women of Dr. Who pictures a few weeks ago and then got busy with other things — plus Tumblr kinda failed me for a bit, not posting any inspiring stuff. But now I’m back with more lovelies for your Sunday viewing pleasure.



Leela (Louise Jameson)



Romana (Mary Tamm) with the Doctor (Tom Baker)
in The Armageddon Factor.



Rose (Billy Piper) in The Long Game.



Agatha Christie (Fanella Wollgar) in
“The Unicorn and the Wasp” (new series 4.7)
Freema Agyeman (Martha Jones)
and David Tennant (10th Dr.)
Jackie Tyler (Camille Coduri) and Mickey Smith (Noel Clarke) in
“Aliens of London” (new series 1.4)
Lucy Saxon (Alexandra Moen)
Toshiko Sato (Naoko Mori) from Torchwood
Amy Pond (Karen Gillan) with fiance Rory Williams (Arthur Darvill)
in “The Vampires of Venice” (new series 5.6)

All photos drawn from whoniverse, fuckyeahdrwho, karengillanlover, aimeesgonnaaim and whospam tumblr blogs.

You can see last week’s installment here.
I couldn’t find any satisfactory pictures of River Song … but the minute I do I’ll add them to the queue for the next installment.

Have a lovely Sunday … Hanna and I and a few of our fellow Whovians are off to the Brattle Theater in Cambridge tonight for a big-screen viewing of “The End of Time.” Hooray!

saturday smut: missing Aberdeen (and winter snow)

04 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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british isles, family, outdoors, photos

As I’m writing this it’s Friday night of a really long, long week … the penultimate week of my semester in which all my projects were wrapping up and life just generally felt like one damn thing after another.

And then I found these lovely photographs made available online at The Scotsman (Edinburgh), snapshots taken by Scots from around the country documenting the wild winter weather they’ve been having in Britain this week. Since it’s December 3rd here in Boston and we’ve yet to see a single flake of snow (though the forecasters promise some Monday), I’m going to indulge in a little winter weather photo porn.

Enjoy!

Kildrummy, Aberdeenshire (by Darren)
Balerno (by Alan Macmillan)
Christmas Fair, Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh (by Sarah McPhee)
Newtongrange (by S. Robert)
Sheep in the Borders (John Peters)

Click through to see all the rest in four parts at The Scotsman’s website.

in praise of do-nothing days

29 Monday Nov 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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domesticity, hanna, photos

Hanna and I spent Thanksgiving vacation at home this year, in Boston. We didn’t travel and for the most part we didn’t plan to do a lot of stuff. Between last Tuesday afternoon and Sunday night we just … spent time together. And it was good. It’s the first vacation of that kind I’ve had, really, since moving to Boston. At least for that duration. It can be hard, sometimes, to purposefully do “nothing” … nothing that counts as productivity, that is. Of course we did stuff. And even in those moments when we weren’t baking, reading, cleaning, talking, watching movies, surfing the ‘net for pretty pictures … even in those moments of true idleness, we were doing something: we were being. Together. And it was good.

Hope y’all had a good vacation as well; I’m sure I’ll get my hand back into blogging soon enough.

UPDATE: For more photographs from our long weekend, see Hanna’s most recent post at …fly over me, evil angel ….

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