Wednesday, January 11, 2006

The Genius of Others

The title above is the name of Part Six of a chapbook, Unrehearsed Beauty, written by my friend the choreographer, playwright, director, performer, and writer Jacob Wren. It's something he spends a great deal of time thinking about and collaboratively incorporating into his shows.

I borrow it for this entry because it seems to me the genius of others is the best of what the interactive potential of blogging is all about.

I recently joked with him that I'm mad I do much better writing in his blog via comments than I do in my own.

If people other than those who know me personally happen to read Cogitfaucet it's incidental to this blog's circumscribed and mostly autobiographical purpose. Not so, Jacob's A Radical Cut In The Texture of Reality. Every Monday he publishes intensely intellectual, divergent, and original entries reflecting his constant ruminations about art, culture, politics, and ethics, as well as some of his fiction.

If these things interest you, too, and/or if you enjoy my writing in this blog beyond catching up on my news, you should check this out: http://radicalcut.blogspot.ca

Thank you, Jacob, for writing things that make me want to stay up half the night writing myself!

Thanks be to Thirza, too--another terrific artist and friend--for her brilliantly and often hilariously scattershot day-in-the-life blog: http://fitofpique.blogspot.ca

(Note: You may have to type these blog addresses into your address bar to access them.)

2 Comments:

Blogger Thirza Cuthand said...

Eeee! You're getting them too!! They're everywhere! Seriously though, reading you is a treat, even if you never read my blog.

Fri Feb 03, 06:05:00 PM EST  
Blogger Robin said...

Thirza!! For I don't even know how long I've checked in on your terrific blog at least once every three days. I get a big kick out of them, and am disappointed when you're too busy to add new ones. I just don't comment much because I can't think of what would be worth adding to your own very personal commentaries. For example, "I just teabagged myself." I just want to laugh and enjoy that funny mental association, not say, "Oh yeah, Thirza, I think you and the rest of the world would like to know I just teabagged myself, too" (even if I did!)

Sun Feb 05, 07:33:00 PM EST  

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